Books
The Christian life is often described in terms of belief — what we agree with, what we confess, what we say we believe about God. But the deeper invitation of the gospel is not simply belief, but transformation.
Through his writing, Dave Ellis explores the quiet work of spiritual formation: learning to slow down, notice God at work, and gradually become more like Jesus in the ordinary moments of everyday life.
His books combine personal story, biblical reflection, and simple practices designed to help readers move beyond information toward genuine transformation.
The Christian life is often described in terms of belief — what we agree with, what we confess, what we say we believe about God. But the deeper invitation of the gospel is not simply belief, but transformation.
Through his writing, Dave Ellis explores the quiet work of spiritual formation: learning to slow down, notice God at work, and gradually become more like Jesus in the ordinary moments of everyday life.
His books combine personal story, biblical reflection, and simple practices designed to help readers move beyond information toward genuine transformation.
Don’t Just Believe. Become.
There is a way of following Jesus that does not lead to exhaustion, but to renewal.
In Don’t Just Believe. Become., Dave Ellis invites readers to rediscover a slower, deeper way of life with God. Drawing on years of pastoral experience and his own journey of faith, he explores how real transformation rarely comes through striving harder, but through learning to notice what God is already doing within us.
Part memoir, part spiritual reflection, and part gentle guide, the book helps readers move beyond a faith that is merely believed toward a life that is gradually formed in the likeness of Christ.
This is not a book about trying harder.
It is an invitation to slow down, see clearly, and begin becoming.
There is a way of following Jesus that does not lead to exhaustion, but to renewal.
In Don’t Just Believe. Become., Dave Ellis invites readers to rediscover a slower, deeper way of life with God. Drawing on years of pastoral experience and his own journey of faith, he explores how real transformation rarely comes through striving harder, but through learning to notice what God is already doing within us.
Part memoir, part spiritual reflection, and part gentle guide, the book helps readers move beyond a faith that is merely believed toward a life that is gradually formed in the likeness of Christ.
This is not a book about trying harder.
It is an invitation to slow down, see clearly, and begin becoming.