FRUM Glory to Glory
FRUM Glory to Glory
This workbook was not born out of theory, theology alone, or someone else’s system. It was born
out of relationship, experience, failure, growth, healing, and time spent with God—day after
day, morning after morning.
From Glory to Glory is not about striving to become spiritual. It is about returning to order.
At some point in life, many of us learn how to survive. We learn how to cope, how to push
through pain, how to manage emotions, how to stay functional. Survival keeps us alive—but it
does not make us free. God did not design us merely to survive; He designed us to live in
relationship with Him, walking in peace, clarity, and purpose.
This morning routine grew slowly and organically in my own life. I did not set out to create a
program. I simply began giving God the first fruit of my day—the first moments of
consciousness, the first attention of my mind, the first posture of my heart. Over time, something
began to change. My reactions softened. My mind quieted. My body began to heal. My
relationship with God deepened—not because I tried harder, but because I showed up
consistently.
This workbook is meant to walk alongside the From Glory to Glory morning routine book. It is a
companion—a place to reflect, to understand why each step matters, and to ground what you are
practicing in truth, Scripture, and lived experience. It is not meant to replace the Holy Spirit, nor
is it meant to become a rigid rulebook. It is an invitation.
An invitation to slow down.
An invitation to listen.
An invitation to begin each day from presence rather than pressure.
You may find that some days feel powerful and clear, while other days feel quiet or even
resistant. That is normal. This is not about performance—it is about faithfulness. God meets us
where we are, not where we think we should be.
My prayer is that as you walk through this routine, you will experience what I have experienced:
a growing sense of peace, increasing clarity, emotional stability, physical renewal, and a deeper
awareness of God’s nearness. Not because life becomes easy—but because you no longer face it
alone or unprepared.
Take your time with this.
Be gentle with yourself.
And above all, be honest with God.
He delights in meeting you here. — Rev. Frederick March