Some people learn how to survive before they learn how to rest.
They learn how to perform before they learn how to surrender.
They learn camouflage before confession.
Raised within Seventh-day Adventist culture while navigating instability, shame, exhaustion, and survival, Michael Reahl explores the hidden world many Christians quietly inhabit: a world where outward religious performance often conceals inward fear, loneliness, and spiritual exhaustion.
Through deeply personal reflections shaped by military service, emergency medicine, law enforcement, rural Alaska, and theological formation, this book confronts the tension between camouflage Christianity and truthful surrender.
This is not a book attacking faith.
It is a plea for honesty.
A plea for a Christianity where people no longer need to pretend.
Where grace reaches beyond appearances.
Where exhausted believers stop hiding long enough to encounter Christ relationally instead of merely religiously.
Raw, reflective, and deeply human, Learning Adventism Before Learning Christ invites readers beyond performance and into something many have quietly longed for all along:
truthful rest in Christ.