Comeback: A New Year, A New Season

Scripture: “Do not gloat over me, my enemies! For though I fall, I will rise again. Though I sit in darkness, the Lord will be my light.” (Micah 7:8, NLT)

As the new year begins, there’s one word that keeps rising in my spirit… COMEBACK.

Not the kind that makes headlines. Not the kind that demands applause. But the kind that’s quiet and holy… the kind that happens after the healing, after the surrender, after the silence.

2024 was a year of sitting still, of deep work, of trusting God in the in-between.
2025 is the year to rise. To move forward. To say yes again.

A Comeback in Ministry
I have struggled and questioned whether I’d ever feel ready again. Whether the bruises I carried disqualified me from being used. But the truth is, ministry was never about perfection, it was about obedience.

Ministry isn’t what I do. It’s who I am.

There’s a fire inside me that never fully went out. God’s call didn’t disappear when the pain came in. The Word says, “God’s gifts and His call are irrevocable.” (Romans 11:29, NIV)

And again, “He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 1:6, NIV)

This year, I’m walking fully back into what He’s always called me to.

I’ll continue to write. To pray. To encourage. To teach.
The Priceless Minute will be a space where honesty meets hope, and where truth is shared in love.
This is the year I stop tiptoeing around my calling and step into it boldly.

A Comeback in Love
I have really wrestled with this one. I’ve asked God, “Will I ever be ready? Will I ever trust again? Can someone love and nurture my kids? Is there anyone who shares my passion for life and for the Lord?”

The truth is… I do believe in love. I do believe in the sanctity of marriage, the beauty of covenant, commitment, and Christ at the center.
I believe God restores what’s been broken, even if it looks different than I imagined.
I believe He still writes beautiful stories when we surrender the pen.

This year, I’m walking forward with an open heart. Not rushing, not forcing, but no longer closed off. I believe there’s someone who will walk with me, pray with me, and serve alongside me. Someone who knows the cost of ministry, but also the joy of it. A partner, not a fixer, not a replacement, but a woman of God who wants the same things I do: Jesus first, family strong, purpose fulfilled.

I’m not looking back. I’m trusting forward.

A Comeback for My Vision
The vision didn’t die… it was just waiting.

The Priceless Minute will launch and grow, becoming a space to write, reflect, and encourage.
The prayer center, called Kneel 24, is already in motion.
And the church? Still being prayed over, but the fire is there.

I’ve dreamed about a place where prayer never stops. Where people are discipled deeply. Where the broken find healing and the faithful find purpose. That’s not just a dream. It’s a calling. And this year, I’m taking steps toward it again.

I’m not chasing titles. I’m chasing obedience.

Rising After the Fall
One of the most powerful things about a comeback is that it doesn’t pretend the fall didn’t happen. It simply refuses to let the fall be the end of the story.

I’ve fallen. I’ve wept. I’ve sat in the dark.
But God has always been my light.

He’s taken ashes and begun turning them into beauty.
He’s taken mourning and begun giving me joy.
He’s taken despair and taught me to worship anyway.

“To all who mourn… He will give a crown of beauty for ashes, a joyous blessing instead of mourning, festive praise instead of despair.” (Isaiah 61:3, NLT)

This is the year I wear the crown. Not because I’ve arrived, but because I’ve survived. Because He is faithful. Because He is worthy. And because I believe this next season will be full of joy, purpose, and praise.

Bible Promise:
“The Lord will restore the splendor of Jacob… for the destroyers have laid them waste.” (Nahum 2:2, NLT)

Reflection Questions:

  1. What area of your life is God calling you to reclaim this year?
  2. What would a spiritual comeback look like in your heart, your home, or your calling?

Prayer:
Heavenly Father,
Thank You for being the God of comebacks. For not giving up on me. For walking with me through the fire and never leaving my side. I give You 2025. I lay my calling, my heart, and my dreams at Your feet. Lead me boldly into this next season, and help me walk in confidence, not in shame. I pray for every person reading this who needs a comeback of their own. Remind them that You restore, redeem, and rewrite stories.
I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise.
It’s in Jesus’ name I pray.
Amen & Amen.

The Reveal: It’s Not About Me… It Never Was

January 1, 2025

For seven years, I’ve written behind the scenes. Quietly, prayerfully, and anonymously as The Hidden Pastor. It was never about hiding in fear. It was about staying faithful in a season when visibility could have become a distraction. Silence wasn’t weakness… it was wisdom.

At the time, I was serving in ministry alongside my wife, who was the children’s pastor at our church. Her role was public, and rightly so. She was doing incredible, God-glorifying work. The last thing I wanted was for anything I wrote to cast a shadow, shift attention, or draw people away from what God was doing through her or the ministry we were part of. So I stayed behind the curtain, writing in the quiet, under a name that fit that season.

And in that hiddenness, God met me. He shaped me. He healed me. He gave me words when I had no voice, strength when I felt emptied, and clarity when everything around me felt uncertain. Through pain and pruning, He reminded me of the call He placed on my life long ago. A call to teach, to counsel, to shepherd, and to write. Not to elevate myself, but to lift up the name that saves… Jesus.

Today, that season shifts.

As of January 1, 2025, I’m stepping forward. Not to be seen, but to be faithful. From this day on, I’ll be writing under my real name…Pastor Jason Price.

Not because the mission has changed. But because it’s time.

I still believe with all my heart that this work isn’t about me. It never has been. And that’s why, in this new season, I’ll continue to remind myself and others…
It’s not about Jason Price—it’s about Jesus Christ.

So what’s next?

I’m excited to introduce something that’s been developing behind the scenes for years, something I’ve prayed over, written into, and poured my heart into through every season of joy, heartbreak, silence, and growth. It’s called The Priceless Minute.

This blog series is made up of short, Scripture-rooted reflections. Some are personal. Some are theological. Some are raw and messy. Others are more structured and practical. But all of them are real. Every word has come from a place of deep conviction and a genuine love for the Church.

You’ll notice the dates on many of these blogs go back years. That’s intentional. These were written in real time, in real seasons, even if they’re just now being shared publicly. You might even notice the tone shift a bit as you read. That’s okay. That’s growth. That’s the beauty of letting God use every season to teach and refine us.

My prayer is that The Priceless Minute becomes more than a blog. I hope it becomes a place of encouragement, challenge, and truth; something that meets you right where you are and points you straight to Jesus.

So whether you’re coming over from other platforms and have been here from the beginning, or today’s your first visit… welcome.

Let’s grow together. Let’s kneel in prayer, rise in faith, and walk in obedience. Let’s fix our eyes on Jesus and follow Him boldly.

Because it was never about the name at the bottom of the page.
It’s always been about the name above every name.

In His service,
Pastor Jason Price

Church Isn’t About the Building

Scripture: “For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.” (Matthew 18:20, NIV)

Growing up, Sunday mornings meant dressing up, sitting on a pew, and listening to the pastor, my bonus dad, bring the Word while my mom led worship. I loved the tradition. I respected the rhythm. But honestly… I didn’t fully understand what church really, truly meant.

Even after Bible school, years of serving, and being on staff in ministry, it wasn’t until my world fell apart… when I found myself walking through divorce, single parenting, and questioning my calling, that I finally began to understand.

Church isn’t about a building.

I remember sitting on the living room floor with my daughter one evening. There was no stage, no microphone, no worship team. Just the two of us, praying together, reading Scripture, and singing. In that moment, I felt the presence of God as clearly as if I had been in the grandest sanctuary. He was there.

That’s what church is.

The New Testament church wasn’t centered on pews or programs. It was people. People breaking bread together, praying together, worshiping together. It was life shared in simplicity, with Jesus at the center.

But let me be clear. This doesn’t mean church gatherings are optional. Scripture calls us to not neglect meeting together. There is power in corporate worship, shared teaching, accountability, and the spiritual covering of biblical leadership. Church isn’t about where you gather, but that you gather. Whether it’s in a building, a home, a park, or a borrowed space, we are called to be the Body of Christ together, not just individually.

That’s what I strive to model now. Whether I’m in a church building, standing on the sideline during daughter’s volleyball game, or talking to a neighbor on the driveway, I want to carry the presence of Christ with me. Church doesn’t start at 10 a.m. It starts in the heart of those who gather in His name.

Bible Promise:
God’s presence is not confined to walls. He meets us wherever we are.
The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth.
Psalm 145:18 (NLT)

Reflection Questions:

  1. Where have you experienced God’s presence outside of a traditional church building?
  2. How can you model “being the church” in your everyday life this week?

Prayer:

Heavenly Father,
Thank You for reminding me that Your presence isn’t limited to a building. Help me carry the heart of the church wherever I go, into my home, my workplace, my conversations, and every part of my daily life. And at the same time, give me a deep love for the Body of Christ. Let me never take for granted the beauty of gathering with other believers. Make me more aware of Your nearness, and help me reflect Your love and truth with every step I take.
I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise.
It’s in Jesus’ name I pray.
Amen & Amen.

Forgiveness Isn’t a Moment… It’s a Ministry

Scripture: “Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.” (Colossians 3:13, NIV)

I used to think forgiveness was a moment. Something you decide once, and that’s it. But I have learned that sometimes forgiveness becomes a ministry. Something you live out day by day, moment by moment, decision by decision.

When my wife left, I chose to forgive. And I have had to keep choosing… Every time a memory came back, every time sadness hit out of nowhere, every time a new revelation or event made the pain fresh again.

One afternoon, my daughter asked me a question that stopped me cold. She looked up at me and said, “Dad, why don’t you ever say anything bad about Mom?” Her words pierced straight through me. She wasn’t asking to challenge me. She wasn’t being critical. She was simply noticing something… and wondering why.

That’s when I realized that forgiveness wasn’t just about me anymore. It was about her too. She was watching. She was learning from how I responded.

That’s why I made a decision early on. I would not speak negatively about her mother. Not because I wasn’t hurting. Not because I didn’t have things I could say. But because she was my wife. She is the mother of my children. And I believe she was once anointed by God to lead, to serve, and to love. Who am I to raise my hand, or my mouth, against that?

“Do not touch my anointed ones, do my prophets no harm.” (1 Chronicles 16:22, NIV)

I trust that God will take care of what needs to be handled. My job is to keep my heart right, and to protect my daughter’s in the process.

Forgiveness doesn’t mean I feel nothing. It means I give everything over to God. It means when bitterness knocks at the door, I don’t answer. It means when people try to speak badly about her, I shut it down. Not because she is perfect, but because I want to be found faithful.

Forgiving wasn’t about excusing what happened. It was about freeing myself from the prison of resentment. By letting go, I wasn’t just obeying God. I was opening my heart to His healing and His peace. Now, I can look back without anger or regret.

My daughter taught me a valuable lesson that day. Children see more than we realize. Forgiveness isn’t just a gift we give others. It’s a testimony of God’s grace to those watching our lives.

This season has taught me that forgiveness isn’t weakness. It’s worship. It’s not forgetting. It’s trusting. It’s not about getting justice. It’s about giving Jesus room to work.

And yes, I am still praying for restoration. I believe God can redeem anything. But while I wait, I will keep forgiving.


Bible Promise:
“So if the Son sets you free, you are truly free.” (John 8:36, NLT)


Reflection Questions:

  1. Who is watching your life that might learn about God’s grace through your forgiveness?
  2. What would it look like to forgive today, even before the situation is fully resolved?

Prayer:
Heavenly Father,
Thank You for showing me what true forgiveness looks like through the cross. Thank You for reminding me that forgiveness is not a one-time decision, but a daily act of surrender. Help me to forgive even when it hurts, even when the story feels unfinished. I trust You with my pain, with my future, and with the people I love. Use my life as a reflection of Your grace.
I give You all honor, all the glory, and all of the praise.
It’s in Jesus’ name I pray.
Amen and Amen.

When God Keeps You Hidden

Scripture:
He reveals deep and hidden things; He knows what lies in darkness, and light dwells with Him.
Daniel 2:22 (NIV)

I’ve always had this sense that God was doing something in the shadows, quietly shaping me, refining me, setting things in place before revealing the why.

I’m not talking about being overlooked or dismissed. I’m talking about being hidden… by God. Protected. Set aside. Not because I’m unqualified, but because He’s preparing me for something deeper.

I’ve come to believe that hidden seasons aren’t punishment… they’re preparation.

Moses spent 40 years in the wilderness before leading Israel. David was anointed king but went back to the field. Even Jesus didn’t begin His public ministry until age 30. There’s something sacred about being hidden, something holy about being developed in the dark.

We live in a world that values visibility and affirmation, but God values faithfulness in private. He sees the prayers no one hears, the obedience no one applauds, the tears that never make it into posts or journals. He sees… and He’s not in a hurry.

I used to want breakthrough. Now I want obedience.

I used to want recognition. Now I want roots.

Because when the season shifts and the curtain lifts, I don’t want to just have a message. I want to be the kind of person who can carry it well.

Maybe that’s where you are too. Maybe you’ve been faithful in the quiet places, and you’re wondering if God even notices. He does. And in His time, He will bring to light what’s been growing in secret.

Stay hidden if that’s where He has you. That’s not the end of your story. That’s the foundation.

Bible Promise:
For the Lord sees clearly what a man does, examining every path he takes.
Proverbs 5:21 (NLT)

Reflection Questions:

  1. What have you learned about yourself or about God in hidden seasons?
  2. What would it look like to lean into preparation instead of striving for promotion?

Prayer:

Father, thank You for the seasons when You’ve hidden me… not to punish me, but to protect me and prepare me. Teach me to value obedience over applause, roots over recognition, and preparation over promotion. I trust Your timing and Your process. Make me ready to carry what You’ve called me to, but keep me grounded in You. I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise. It’s in Jesus’ name I pray. Amen & Amen.

Where Did the Time Go?

Scripture:
Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.
Psalm 90:12 (NIV)

I blinked… and another month flew by.

Sometimes I wonder where all the time goes. Not in a lazy, “Oops I forgot to write” kind of way, but in that deeper, soul-level way that makes you sit still and ask:

Am I spending my time on what matters most?

Life is full right now. Parenting. Ministry. Marriage. Work. Bills. Ballgames. Church events. Texts I haven’t answered. People I haven’t checked on. Prayers I keep putting off till tomorrow. And somewhere in all of it… the days just slip away.

But God doesn’t waste time, even when we do.
And He’s not asking us to do more. He’s asking us to be more; more present, more faithful, more intentional with what He’s already placed in our hands.

Time isn’t just measured in hours or days. It’s measured in impact.
It’s in the way we sit and listen, the way we show up, the way we honor the Lord in the ordinary.

So maybe the better question isn’t Where did the time go?
Maybe it’s What did I do with the time God gave me?

Today, I’m slowing down just long enough to give Him thanks. For the breath in my lungs. For the people I get to love. For the grace that keeps chasing me down. And for the gentle way He keeps pulling me back when my pace runs ahead of His purpose.

Bible Promise:
For everything there is a season, a time for every activity under heaven.
Ecclesiastes 3:1 (NLT)

Reflection Questions:

  1. Are you spending your time on what truly matters?
  2. What is one area where God is asking you to slow down and be present?

Prayer:

Lord, thank You for each moment You’ve given me. Forgive me for rushing through days and missing Your presence in the small things. Teach me to value time, not as something to control, but as something to steward. Help me be present with the people You’ve entrusted to me. Help me follow Your pace. I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise. It’s in Jesus’ name I pray. Amen & Amen.

Start Small, Stay Faithful

Scripture:
If you are faithful in little things, you will be faithful in large ones.
Luke 16:10 (NLT)

Some of the most powerful things God does in our lives begin small.

A whisper. A seed. A yes in private that no one else sees. It might not feel big or exciting, but heaven notices faithfulness long before the crowd ever does.

I’ve seen it in my own life. The mornings where I get up early to pray or the nights I stay up late to pray, even when I feel tired. The times I serve when no one thanks me. The moments I forgive when I could have stayed bitter. It’s in those small, hidden acts of obedience that God keeps shaping my character.

We love to talk about calling and purpose, but most of that is built on what we do when no one’s watching. It’s how we treat people, how we handle disappointment, how we honor God behind the scenes.

God doesn’t need us to be flashy. He calls us to be faithful.

Start small. Stay faithful. And watch what God does with a life surrendered fully to Him.

Bible Promise:
Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin.
Zechariah 4:10 (NLT)

Reflection Questions:

  1. What small act of obedience is God asking from you this week?
  2. How can you stay faithful in the season you’re in, even if it feels hidden?

Prayer:

Lord, thank You for reminding me that You value faithfulness over fame. Help me not to overlook the small beginnings or the quiet moments. Teach me to show up with integrity, humility, and a heart that honors You. Grow something lasting in me as I keep saying yes to You. I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise.
It’s in Jesus’ name I pray.
Amen & Amen.

Don’t Rush the Season

Scripture:
To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under heaven.
Ecclesiastes 3:1 (NKJV)

Some seasons feel slow. Others feel stuck. And some feel like they’ll never end.

But what if the point isn’t to escape the season, but to embrace what it’s doing in you?

I’ve been in places where I begged God to move faster. I didn’t say it out loud, but deep down I just wanted the lesson to be over so I could get to the next thing. But God doesn’t work on our timeline. He works on our heart. And sometimes the season lasts longer because the roots aren’t deep enough yet.

There are things God wants to teach us in each season. Not just endurance, but dependence. Not just waiting, but worship. Not just trusting that He’s working, but learning how to walk with Him even when we don’t see the full picture.

Think about it; when a tree is planted, it doesn’t bear fruit right away. It grows downward first. Quietly. Secretly. The roots go deep before the branches ever reach out. The fruit comes after the roots.

So if you feel buried, maybe you’re just being planted.
And if you’re feeling delayed, maybe you’re just being developed.

Trust the process. Trust the pace. And don’t rush the season God has you in. He’s not just preparing something for you…He’s preparing you for something.

Bible Promise:
Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.
Galatians 6:9 (NIV)

Reflection Questions:

  1. Are you trying to rush something God is using to shape you?
  2. What fruit could grow in your life if you stay faithful right where you are?

Prayer:

Father, help me not to rush the season I’m in. I know You are working, even when I can’t see it, and I trust Your timing more than my own. Teach me to grow deep roots, to walk with You daily, and to embrace what You’re forming in me. Don’t let me waste the quiet places. Use them to shape me into someone who’s strong, steady, and full of Your Spirit. I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise. It’s in Jesus’ name I pray. Amen & Amen.

Rooted Before Ready

Scripture:
The godly will flourish like palm trees and grow strong like the cedars of Lebanon. For they are transplanted to the Lord’s own house. They flourish in the courts of our God.
Psalm 92:12–13 (NLT)

We live in a world that’s obsessed with being ready. Ready for the promotion. Ready for the platform. Ready for the next step.

But God is more interested in whether we’re rooted.

Roots are what keep us grounded when storms hit. They’re what hold us in place when everything else is shaking. And in the Kingdom, being rooted in Christ matters more than being ready in the eyes of people.

I’ve had seasons where I begged God to use me more, but I hadn’t let Him grow me deeper.

He’s teaching me that being hidden isn’t a waste. It’s a gift. It’s the time to develop, to dig in, to become steady. To let truth go deep enough that it anchors me no matter what comes.

Because the truth is, being rooted is what makes you ready.

Bible Promise:
Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord… they will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream.
Jeremiah 17:7–8 (NIV)

Reflection Questions:

  1. Are you focusing more on being ready or being rooted?
  2. What can you do this week to strengthen your spiritual foundation?

Prayer:

Father, grow me deeper before You take me further. Help me not to chase moments I’m not yet rooted enough to carry. Plant me firmly in Your Word, in Your presence, and in Your truth. I want to be steady, strong, and anchored in You. I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise. It’s in Jesus’ name I pray. Amen & Amen.

The Power of Showing Up

Scripture:
Now it is required that those who have been given a trust must prove faithful.
1 Corinthians 4:2 (NIV)

Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is just show up.

Not perfectly. Not loudly. Just faithfully.

There have been Sundays I’ve walked into church feeling drained. Days I’ve opened my Bible without fireworks or feelings. Moments I’ve served, I’ve smiles, I’ve checked so many people in, yet no one clapped or even noticed. But those were some of the most important moments in my walk because I kept showing up.

Consistency is underrated in our world, but it’s priceless in the Kingdom.

God isn’t asking for performance. He’s looking for obedience. You may not see results right away. You may not even feel different in the moment. But when you keep showing up, you’re building spiritual muscle. You’re proving trustworthy with the little.

So today, wherever God has placed you, your home, your ministry, your job… just show up. Be faithful in it. Keep walking, even when it feels small. Faithfulness in the small is often the road to something greater.

Bible Promise:
Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin.
Zechariah 4:10 (NLT)

Reflection Questions:

  1. Where is God calling you to simply show up and stay faithful?
  2. How do you measure success, and how might God define it differently?

Prayer:

Lord, thank You for trusting me with what You’ve placed in my hands. Help me not to overlook the small or chase the flashy. Help me to be faithful. I want to show up consistently and walk with You daily, even when it’s quiet, even when it’s hard. I give You all honor, all the glory, and all the praise. It’s in Jesus’ name I pray. Amen & Amen.