• A:
    Absolutely. While Eve’s Greens is deeply rooted in biblical teachings and the healing gifts of Scripture, no one is ever turned away from healing.
    If you feel called to these herbs, these words, or these baths — come as you are.

    I believe God’s creation speaks to the soul, and if you are seeking peace, rest, or reconnection with the Divine, this space will meet you with love — not judgment.

    This is a sacred offering, not a sermon. My work is rooted in Christ, but the door is open to all who are drawn to healing through His creation

  • No these products support, rest, reflection and wellness. They are not medical treatments

  • Absolutely not. Every bath, herb, and oil shared here is meant to honor God — not replace Him.
    Jesus is the true healer, the source of every restoration. Yet throughout Scripture, God often chose to work through simple, physical tools as signs of faith and obedience.

    When Jesus healed the blind man, He made mud from the ground and placed it on his eyes (John 9:6–7).
    When the prophet Elisha told Naaman to wash in the Jordan River to be cleansed of leprosy (2 Kings 5:10), it was faith, not water, that brought healing.
    When the woman with the issue of blood touched the hem of Jesus’ garment (Mark 5:27–29), power flowed from Him through that point of contact.

    Each of these moments shows that God sometimes allows the natural to carry the supernatural.
    Herbs, oils, and water are part of His creation — gifts He designed “for the service of man” (Psalm 104:14).
    So when we prepare a cleansing bath, anoint our homes, or use healing herbs, it’s not about ritual — it’s about responding in faith to what God has already provided.

    These practices invite you to slow down, pray, and remember:

    The same God who made the heavens also made the herbs that heal.
    The act doesn’t hold the power — the obedience and faith behind it do.

  •  “Witchcraft seeks power apart from God — what I do is centered in Him. Everything on this site uses Scripture, not spells. The difference is the source of power. I pray over these ingredients, use His Word, and give all glory to the Most High.
    If Exodus 30 and Psalm 51 describe cleansing and anointing as holy acts, then it’s not witchcraft — it’s worship through God’s creation.”

  • Because in Scripture, herbs were never used to control — they were used to receive.

    When Rachel sought mandrakes (Genesis 30), she wasn’t invoking spirits or casting spells; she was using what God had placed in creation while still trusting Him to open her womb.

    The difference is intention and source: witchcraft seeks power apart from God, but biblical herbal use gives glory to God as the Creator of all healing.

    Using herbs faithfully is not magic — it’s stewardship. It’s recognizing that the same hands that formed the stars also formed the soil that grows medicine.

    When I use or prepare these plants, I pray over them, dedicate them to His purpose, and remember:

    the healing isn’t in the leaf or the root — it’s in the Lord who made them

  • The Bible repeatedly connects washing with cleansing and renewal — both physical and spiritual.
    Naaman washed in the Jordan (2 Kings 5). The priests washed before entering the temple (Exodus 30:18-21).
    Jesus washed His disciples’ feet as an act of purification and humility (John 13:5).
    Water has always been part of God’s healing and sanctifying process — from the flood, to baptism, to the Jordan.”


  •  “Prayer is always enough — but God often works through the physical world.
    Jesus used mud and water. Elisha told Naaman to wash. God gave Moses a recipe for holy oil. These weren’t replacements for faith — they were expressions of it.
    Herbs and baths are ways to slow down, pray, and let the body and spirit align in obedience.”

  • Yes, we live under grace — and grace doesn’t cancel God’s wisdom in creation.
    The same God who gave those herbs in Genesis didn’t remove them after the Cross. Jesus fulfilled the law, not nature.
    Using what God made to care for the body honors the temple He gave us (1 Corinthians 6:19–20). Grace invites us to live wisely, not ignore His gifts

  • No — the Gospel is complete in Christ. These baths aren’t about salvation; they’re about stewardship.
    Caring for the body, mind, and spirit is part of honoring what God entrusted us with.
    Just as some believers use fasting, anointing oil, or communion to connect with God, I use herbs and Scripture-based baths to reconnect with His peace

  • It is symbolic — that’s the point.
    God often used symbols to teach deeper truths: oil for anointing, salt for covenant, bread and wine for communion.
    Symbols don’t replace faith — they remind us of it.
    When I create a bath, I’m not doing magic — I’m creating a physical reminder of a spiritual promise

  • True cleansing always starts with repentance.
    Every bath I create includes Scripture, prayer, and reflection — because it’s not just about the body, it’s about the heart.
    Psalm 51:7 says, ‘Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean.’ David wasn’t doing a ritual; he was repenting through a symbolic act. These baths are the same — prayerful tools for reflection and healing

  • Not at all — it points back to Him.
    The Magi brought frankincense and myrrh to the newborn Christ (Matthew 2:11).
    Mary anointed Jesus’ feet with costly oil (John 12:3).
    Each time, the focus wasn’t the oil — it was the honor given to Jesus.
    I use herbs and oils the same way — as an offering of reverence and faith

  • Faith informs intention, not control over outcomes

  • No. Eve’s Greens products are intended to complement personal wellness and spiritual reflection. They are not a substitute for medical, mental health or professional care.