• Your Voice Carries Healing – Spiritually and Physically

    ISSUE #009

    Hey my friend! Have you ever noticed how much better you feel after worshiping, praying out loud, or just letting your creativity flow without judgment? There’s a reason for that—and it’s not just spiritual.

    It turns out, God wired your body with a built-in system of healing called the vagus nerve, and activating it is one of the simplest ways to calm your mind and body. Singing, praying aloud, creating—these aren’t just nice things to do. They’re transformational tools, both spiritually and physically.

    This week, I want to help you connect the dots between your creative calling and your God-designed nervous system. Psalm 59:16 reminds us to “sing of Your power… and shout for joy in the morning”—because joy, peace, and healing are released when we open our mouths and engage with God’s presence. Whether you’re in a high moment or fighting through heaviness, your voice is a weapon and a healing balm. Don’t let the enemy keep you silent—lift your voice and watch peace flood your studio.

    I’m cheering you on always!

    In His love and creativity,
    Matt Tommey

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    CONNECT

    Activate Peace by Using Your Voice

    “But as for me, I will sing about your power. Each morning I will sing with joy about your unfailing love.” — Psalm 59:16 NLT

    God didn’t design you to suffer in silence. He designed your body to respond to worship. Speaking God’s Word aloud, singing in the Spirit, and declaring truth over your creative process actually stimulates the vagus nerve—bringing peace to your nervous system. It’s how faith and science beautifully collide.

    Prayer:
    Lord, thank You for the gift of my voice. Help me use it to declare Your truth, sing Your praises, and partner with You in my creative process. Fill my space with Your presence and bring healing to my spirit, soul, and body as I lift up Your name. In Jesus’ name I pray, amen.

    Action Step:
    Start and end each studio session this week by declaring Psalm 59:16 aloud. Let your voice set the spiritual tone in your space.


    CLARIFY

    Focus Your Heart and Hands for the Week

    With everything pulling at your attention, clarity is a gift you have to cultivate intentionally. Instead of letting your day run you, take a moment to pause and ask the Lord, “What’s my focus this week in the studio?” Is it starting something new, finishing a long-standing piece, reaching out to a collector, or simply creating in peace?

    Clarity doesn’t come from doing more—it comes from alignment. When you start your week with God, He’ll help you focus on the right thing, not just the next thing.

    Focus Prompt:
    What’s one specific action God is leading me to focus on creatively this week?

    Action Step:
    Write your focus at the top of your planner or post it in your studio. Example: “This week, I will complete the background layers for my newest painting while staying in a posture of worship and trust.”

    Let that clarity guide your decisions, your schedule, and your energy.


    CREATE

    Making Art is Medicine

    Did you know just 45 minutes of creative activity lowers cortisol, your body’s main stress hormone? And that’s true even if you don’t consider yourself “an artist.” Creating taps into your God-given design and brings healing from the inside out.

    Creative Insight:
    Your time in the studio isn’t a luxury—it’s part of God’s prescription for your well-being.

    Studio Action Step:
    Set a timer for 45 minutes this week and let yourself create freely without overthinking. Let your art be a response to God’s presence—not a performance.


    CULTIVATE

    Use Your Voice to Connect Authentically

    When you share your art publicly, your voice is just as important as the visual. What you say about your work, your process, and your journey can invite others into deeper connection—not just with you, but with the Lord.

    Marketing Tip:
    Record a short voice memo or video explaining the heart behind a piece you’re sharing this week. Post it alongside the art to increase engagement and connection.

    Weekly Outreach Idea:
    Message 2–3 followers or collectors with a personal voice note thanking them for their encouragement. Watch how your authenticity opens doors.


    TECH TIP FOR THRIVING

    Tool: Voice Memos App (iPhone) or similar audio recorder

    Tip: Use your smartphone’s voice recording app to capture spontaneous prayers, declarations, or worship songs during your creative time. These moments of Spirit-led expression can later bring encouragement, clarity, and healing.

    Action Step:
    This week, take 5–10 minutes at the start or end of your creative time to record yourself speaking God’s Word over your journey. Play it back later to reinforce truth and remember what God is doing.

    👉 Learn how to use Voice Memos on iPhone


    LISTEN

    This Week’s Episode: How Worship & Creativity Heal Your Nervous System

    Have you ever wondered why you feel physically better after worshiping or creating? In this episode, I explore the vagus nerve—the biological pathway that connects worship and creativity to peace in your body. From Acts 16 to scientific studies, we’re seeing that God’s design for your voice and creativity is more than spiritual—it’s therapeutic.

    Key Takeaway: Worship, declaration, and creativity all activate your body’s healing mechanisms. Your voice is more powerful than you think.

    Listen now on your favorite podcast app or at
    matttommeymentoring.com/podcast


    WATCH

    This week’s worship recommendation is a powerful declaration song that aligns perfectly with our focus. “I Speak Jesus” by Charity Gayle is a bold anthem that reminds us of the authority and healing power in the name of Jesus. As you sing or listen, remember—your voice carries Heaven’s authority. Speak His name over your studio, your family, your creativity, and your mind.

    🎶 “Your name is power, Your name is healing, Your name is life.”


    FEATURED ARTIST: Mark Ford

    A New Beginning on the Canvas and in Christ
    📍 Website

    For Mark Ford, the journey back to art wasn’t just a career pivot—it was a spiritual awakening. His rediscovery of painting coincided with a powerful move of God in his life, and since then, every brushstroke has become an act of worship.

    Mark grew up along the coast, surrounded by the rhythms of tides, the beauty of seabirds, and the peaceful presence of marine life. Today, he brings those scenes to life through acrylic coastal paintings on canvas, capturing the essence of the shoreline he loves so much.

    Art has always been close to Mark’s heart. “My mother was an artist with an impressive career,” he shares. “She introduced me to painting early on, and unlike my brothers, I was hooked.” His life has always been woven with creativity—from touring the country with his musically inclined family to working hands-on in the construction world. But when a construction-related health limitation forced him to stop working, Mark turned his attention back to art—and back to God.

    That turning point was sparked by a gift from his daughter: Unlocking the Heart of the Artist by Matt Tommey. “The book was fantastic,” he recalls. “It gave me the inspiration and clarity I needed to start a real relationship with God.” And that relationship quickly became personal. “One night, God spoke to me in a dream. I saw a full-color sunrise over my favorite coastal spot, and He told me to paint it and name it A New Beginning.” Mark obeyed, and it marked the beginning of a Spirit-led creative journey.

    Since then, Mark has experienced God’s grace and inspiration in his studio again and again. One special moment came when he felt led to paint a prophetic piece for his niece, who was struggling through law school. “God told me she needed something beautiful to remind her of her strength and support. I painted a group of ibis in the surf at Miami Beach and gave it to her.” She wept when she received it—and today, she’s a successful attorney. “Thank you, God!” Mark says with gratitude.

    His spiritual rhythm is grounded in daily prayer and showing up in the studio consistently. His encouragement to others?
    🙏 “Pray and worship God. Ask for His help, clean out the trash in your head, and LISTEN.”

    Whether he’s painting waves, birds, or sunrise scenes, Mark Ford continues to create from a place of trust and obedience—sharing beauty, peace, and the presence of God with every piece.


    Apply to Be a Featured Artist

    Would you like to be considered for one of our artist features? We love sharing the work from our friends around the world who create unique, beautiful and inspired art, regardless of creative medium. And just a reminder, your work does NOT have to be overtly faith-based to be considered. Interested? Just complete this application: https://forms.gle/vmtyk6wg3hSuUAhi9

    Resources for Christian Artists

    If you’re ready to grow as an artist in your faith, art and even business, then check out these affordable resources for artists just like you.

  • How Singing, Praying, Speaking and Creating Strengthen Your Spirit – and Your Nervous System

    Isn’t it amazing how God has designed us—spirit, soul, and body—to work together in perfect harmony? The more science discovers, the more we see what the Bible has told us all along: prayer, worship, speaking God’s Word, and creativity don’t just connect us to Him spiritually—they literally transform us from the inside out.

    One of the key ways this happens is through something called the vagus nerve. This nerve is part of your parasympathetic nervous system—the “rest and digest” system—and it runs from your brainstem through your face, vocal cords, heart, lungs, and digestive tract. When it’s activated, it brings peace, calm, and balance to your body.

    Research shows that stimulating the vagus nerve can help lower anxiety, reduce depression, ease inflammation, and bring a deep sense of well-being. And here’s the beautiful part: two of the most powerful ways to stimulate this nerve are through singing and praying out loud.

    Dr. Stephen Porges, who developed the Polyvagal Theory, explains:

    “Vagal pathways are involved in controlling the muscles of the face and head, as well as those of the heart and lungs, enabling vocalization and breath control to influence autonomic state” (Porges, 2010, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience).

    In simple terms? When you sing to the Lord or pray out loud, you are literally activating God’s built-in system of peace and restoration.

    It’s not just singing either—your breathing matters too. A 2018 review published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience found that:

    “Slow breathing techniques were associated with increased parasympathetic activity, as indexed by heart rate variability and vagal tone. The findings highlight how controlled breathing can downregulate stress responses and promote calmness and well-being” (Zaccaro et al., 2018).

    God, in His incredible wisdom, designed worship and prayer to do more than lift your spirit—they also bring healing and peace to your whole being. Psalm 139:14 reminds us, “I will praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” The word “praise” here is the Hebrew word yadah, which literally means to throw out the hands in worship and thanksgiving. It’s not a passive, quiet praise—it’s active, vocal, and expressive. Isn’t it incredible that even in Scripture, praise was always meant to be a physical act, engaging both body and spirit?

    Think about Paul and Silas in prison. They didn’t sit there in silence—they prayed and sang hymns to God (Acts 16:25). I believe they weren’t just stirring up faith in that dark place—they were calming their minds and bodies, allowing God’s peace to flow in and through them.

    And Philippians 4:6-7 tells us so clearly: “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

    Science is now confirming what Scripture has said all along: when we pray and worship out loud, it’s not just a spiritual experience—it’s deeply physical too. Ephesians 5:19 says, “Speak to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord.” God’s Word has always known the power of your voice to bring life and peace.

    And for those who pray in the Spirit—what the Bible calls praying in tongues—there’s more incredible evidence. Dr. Andrew Newberg at the University of Pennsylvania conducted a fascinating study using brain scans of believers praying in tongues. He noted:

    “Our brain scans showed a striking decrease in activity in the frontal lobes, the part of the brain that allows us to control what we do. The people were not in control of the usual language centers during this practice, which is consistent with their description of praying in tongues as something that feels like it is happening to them rather than something they are doing” (Newberg et al., 2006).

    Participants also reported feeling deeply peaceful and spiritually connected. Another study found that Christians who regularly pray in tongues experience lower stress levels and greater emotional well-being compared to those who don’t (Francis & Robbins, 2003, Journal of Psychology of Religion and Spirituality).

    And of course, the Bible confirms this: “For if I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays, but my understanding is unfruitful” (1 Corinthians 14:14), and “He who speaks in a tongue edifies himself” (1 Corinthians 14:4). When you pray in the Spirit, you are building yourself up—spiritually, emotionally, and even physically.

    It’s no wonder Proverbs 18:21 tells us, “Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruit.” Every time you pray, sing, and declare God’s truth, you are literally speaking life over yourself—body, soul, and spirit.


    The Power of Speaking God’s Word Out Loud

    This also reveals something critically important: the enemy lives to keep you trapped in your head. His whole strategy is to keep you stuck in cycles of fear, anxiety, worry, and those exhausting, ruminating “internal movies” that play on repeat. Why? Because as long as everything stays internal—just thoughts swirling around—you’re easier to control and oppress.

    But the moment you open your mouth—whether through prayer, praise, or declaring God’s Word—you break the enemy’s grip. You disrupt his lies and release God’s peace, power, and presence over your life.

    The Bible calls Satan “the prince of the power of the air” (Ephesians 2:2), but here’s the truth: your words—spoken out loud into the air—carry the authority, life, and light of Heaven. When you speak the Word, you’re not just reminding yourself of truth; you’re literally shifting the atmosphere, pushing back darkness, and welcoming divine order.

    This is exactly why Proverbs 18:21 says, “Death and life are in the power of the tongue.” Your words are not just noise—they are real spiritual weapons, especially when they contain the living, active, and powerful Word of God, which has the power to defeat the enemy and bring real change.

    So when fear creeps in, when anxiety rises, when the enemy whispers lies, don’t just sit there stuck in your head—that’s exactly where he wants you. Instead, open your mouth. Worship. Pray. Declare His promises boldly. This is how you take your stand, push back the darkness, and experience real peace—not just in your spirit but in your mind and body too.


    The Power of Creativity to Heal and Restore

    And here’s something else to celebrate: creativity itself—whether you’re painting, weaving, sculpting, writing, dancing, or making music—can bring these same kinds of benefits to your body and mind.

    A 2016 study in Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association found that just 45 minutes of creative art-making significantly lowered cortisol levels, the hormone that spikes when we’re stressed (Kaimal et al., 2016). Even people who didn’t consider themselves artists experienced measurable peace and relaxation.

    When we engage in creative work—especially when we find ourselves in that “flow” state, completely immersed in the process—we are calming our nervous systems, increasing heart rate variability, and fostering healing in the body. Science calls it “flow”—but we know it as the creative presence of God working through us.

    This lines up beautifully with what Scripture teaches. We are created in the image of the ultimate Creator. Genesis 1:27 tells us, “So God created mankind in His own image, in the image of God He created them; male and female He created them.” And in Exodus 31, we see how God filled Bezalel with His Spirit, giving him skill, ability, and craftsmanship for the work of the Tabernacle. He was “filled and skilled”—anointed by God not just to create, but to carry out the Lord’s vision with excellence.

    In other words, when we step into what God created us to do—whether it’s worshiping, praying, speaking, or creating—we are participating in life His way. And when we do things His way, we reap the fruit and benefits that come from living according to His design. This isn’t just about following rules or doing something religious—it’s about aligning every part of who we are with His divine blueprint. His ways always lead to life, peace, and wholeness.


    Here’s the Kingdom truth: when you sing, pray, declare, and create, you are not only building up your faith—you are activating peace, health, and wholeness in your body. Your worship, your words, and your creativity are powerful weapons against anxiety, fear, and the enemy’s schemes. This is God’s design—He made you to thrive!

    So today, if you’re feeling anxious, stressed, or overwhelmed, don’t retreat into silence or stay stuck in your head. Lift your voice. Sing. Pray. Create. Speak His Word boldly. Not only will you shift the spiritual atmosphere—you’ll bring your whole being into alignment with His peace and presence.

    “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy name!” (Psalm 103:1).

    You were created to thrive—spirit, soul, and body.


    References & Notes:

    • Porges, S.W. (2010). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-Regulation. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
    • Zaccaro, A., et al. (2018). How Breath-Control Can Change Your Life: A Systematic Review on Psycho-Physiological Correlates of Slow Breathing. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
    • Newberg, A., et al. (2006). Neural correlates of glossolalia (praying in tongues): The measurement of regional cerebral blood flow during glossolalia. University of Pennsylvania study; also cited in How God Changes Your Brain (2009).
    • Francis, L.J., & Robbins, M. (2003). Personality and glossolalia: A study among Pentecostal ministers. Journal of Psychology of Religion and Spirituality.
    • Kaimal, G., Ray, K., & Muniz, J. (2016). Reduction of Cortisol Levels and Participants’ Responses Following Art Making. Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association.
    • This article was created with the research assistance of ChatGPT-4, a language model developed by OpenAI, and edited for personal voice and clarity.