What is Sacred Disruption?
Sacred Disruption is what happens when the soul says no more—not in rebellion, but in reverence.
It’s the moment you realize that the systems you were taught to trust—patriarchy, religion, performance, silence—were never built to hold your wholeness. It’s what begins when you choose truth over tradition, presence over performance, and integration over image.
Sacred Disruption isn’t about burning it all down. It’s about refusing to pretend that a fragmented life is enough.
It’s the pause that makes room for better questions. The unraveling that clears space for the real you. The reimagining of what it means to be strong, sacred, and human.
This isn’t a movement. It’s a remembering.
Not a brand. A framework.
Not a place you enter—but a posture you inhabit.
From Pastor to Disruptor: A Journey of Unlearning
My name is Kevin Scott, and Sacred Disruption is the ongoing work of my life — and maybe yours too.
I’m not here to sell you a version of yourself you hardly recognize.
I’m here to create space for the version you’ve been quietly growing into.
For over 20 years, I lived and led inside systems that taught people how to see themselves, their roles, and their worth. I was a pastor, a nonprofit exec, an author, a speaker. I’ve written and taught and held space for more people than I can count.
But beneath all that, I was also unlearning — letting go of rigid expectations, peeling back inherited beliefs, and learning to trust my deeper knowing.
That’s where this work comes from.
These days, I write and create at the intersection of masculinity, meaning, and spiritual reimagining.
I’m less interested in giving answers and more interested in asking better questions — the kind that stay with you until something true breaks open.
The men who engage this work often find themselves moving:
from performance to presence,
from rigid certainty to courageous curiosity,
from spiritual exile to sacred belonging.
You’ll find some of those questions over at Corner Table, my Substack for soulful, disruptive essays. Others unfold through Travel Crema, a slower, more attentive look at place and presence.
All of it lives under the banner of Sacred Disruption —not because I have it figured out,
but because I’ve stopped pretending I need to.
Before Sacred Disruption had a name, I was already planting its seeds.
Where You May Have Met Me
In my TEDx Talk, “How a Pastor Became a Trans Ally,” I spoke candidly about the cost of certainty, the courage of listening, and the risk it requires to choose people over systems. It’s a story of loss, love, and spiritual disruption — one that still shapes how I show up, speak out, and hold space today.
You may have heard me speak at one of the many Stephen Ministries conferences and workshops I presented at — helping pastors and leaders better understand how to offer emotional and spiritual care to the people they serve — during my 20+ years in ministry before my foundation shifted.
You may have read one of my books — ReCreatable: How God Heals the Brokenness of Life, written before the deeper reimagining that led to Sacred Disruption, or Awakening Faith: A Guide for Loving Those Who Leave the Church, written in the thick of it.
You may know me from my work with writers, or one of the blogs I’ve hosted over the years, or maybe just from the way we’ve crossed paths on this long road toward wholeness.
However you found your way here, I’m grateful. My hope is that something on these pages helps you take the next step on your own soul-honest path.
Want to go deeper into the questions that TEDx talk began to explore? Join me at the Corner Table or Invite Me to Speak.
Let’s Stay in the Conversation
Whether you’re reimagining faith, rewriting your story, or just craving something that feels real,
you’re welcome here.
Start with Corner Table
Subscribe for weekly essays that ask the questions you’re already carrying.
Read one that resonates. Sit with it. Let it work on you.
Go Deeper
If you’re ready for more intentional work around masculinity, meaning, and spiritual reimagining, reach out.
I offer limited one-on-one conversations for men who are serious about this inner work.
Start with an essay, linger with a line, or come sit at the table.
The invitation is yours.