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Get Stripped!

It’s Here: “Stripped” is Now Published!

Today’s the day! I’m thrilled to share that my newest book, Stripped: Tales of Humanity’s Most Basic Elements, is officially published and ready for you to read.

What happens when we’re stripped to our most basic human elements? What happens when what we hide behind gets removed?

Find out when you read stories in this collection of genres! The stories pull together poignant emotional journeys that dig deep into what it means to be human when everything else is taken away—our masks, our pretenses, our illusions. In these pages, characters face defining moments that reveal raw honesty, surprising vulnerability, and unexpected freedom.

Cover image for Stripped - Tales of Humanity's Most Basic Elements

What’s Revealed in Stripped?

  • A courtroom drama where a mysterious man defends his right to hike nude through the Arkansas wilderness.
  • A tense Florida bank heist where every hostage—including a calm and collected pastor—walks out with nothing to hide.
  • A future where living books are written not on pages, but on skin itself.
  • A high elf’s transformative journey through an enchanted forest to find out if the truth is really true.
  • A tale of city come to country where expectations definitely clash with reality.
  • And a Southern Gothic mindbender designed to challenge, unsettle, and ultimately illuminate what it means to strip down to the truth.

Christian Naturists face many challenges when facing the world, the church and family and friends. Conversations around the campfire, in hot tubs and over social media inspired these stories. I am so excited to finally share this journey into empathy with you.

Did you enjoy Between Sun and Skin or ReNude Life? This book is for you. You’ll find themes that discuss freedom, identity, spirituality, and the power of being seen.

Stripped is available now on Amazon.com in Kindle and Paperback!

Thank you to my previewers who encouraged, supported, and inspired me along the way. I can’t wait for you to read these stories! And I’d love to hear which one speaks to you most.

Here’s to journeys that bare the soul.

— Jason

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Simple Truths: A New Series Celebrating the Joy of Being You

We’re so excited to announce the launch of Simple Truths, a new children’s book series from author Jason Stern. This new series of stories is an affordable invitation for young readers to see the world with wonder, joy, and a deep sense of self-acceptance.

Each book in the Simple Truths series uses lighthearted animal or childhood adventures to share a powerful lesson: that God made us just right, exactly as we are. These charming picture books are perfect for young readers or for parents to share as a bedtime story, sparking smiles and laughter with every turn of the page.

Meet the Simple Truths Gang

Jump into adventures with a cast of unforgettable characters! From Barnaby Bear, who learns that being a “bare bear” is exactly what he wants to be, to Felix Fox, who finds out what the Wise Old Owl thinks of his new duck pants. Each tale celebrates innocence, curiosity, and the simple joy of embracing who you are.

In Zola’s Perfect Swimsuit, Zola the giraffe’s animal friends try to convince her that she needs a swimsuit to go for a swim. But Zola has a different idea, and we think she has the right one!

But the fun isn’t just for animals!

Amelie Goes for a Swim follows eight-year-old Amelie as she asks her mom a very thoughtful question on a hot summer day at the pool: “Why do I have to wear a top?” Find out what happens in this heartwarming story, also available in French!

More Than Just a Story

Every book in the Simple Truths series ends with a thoughtful Scripture verse, planting seeds of faith and wisdom in young hearts. These stories are more than just a fun read; they’re a perfect way to introduce concepts of faith and self-worth during bedtime reading or family devotionals.

At ReNude Life Publishing, we believe in creating books that are both uplifting and accessible. Each book in the Simple Truths series shares a body-positive, Scripturally-founded lesson that little ears and eyes will love. These are stories that are kid-tested, inspired, and will have you laughing and cheering.

Ready to share these powerful lessons with the children in your life? Simple Truths books are available now! You can get your Kindle copies today and start the adventure.

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A Perfect Day for a Robbery

Get a Sneak-Peek from My Upcoming Book!

What happens when an ordinary day turns into a test of courage, faith, and the very clothes on your back?

My book, Stripped: Tales of Humanity’s Most Basic Elements, explores these raw questions in a series of six short stories. One of them, “The Naked Shepherd,” begins with Pastor Danny Hart on a simple errand in a busy coastal town. His day, and everyone else’s, is about to take an unforgettable turn. Let’s start the story:


The morning sun glinted off the stained-glass windows of the Open Door Community Church as Pastor Daniel “Danny” Hart locked up the donation box with a satisfied sigh. Spring Break had brought the usual influx of tourists to the coastal town of Seabrook, and with them, a modest bump in the weekly offering. 

Danny tucked the deposit bag under his arm, humming an old hymn as he stepped out into the salty breeze. He was in no particular hurry—just another errand in a life full of small, pleasant routines. His flip-flops slapped against the pavement as he made his way toward First National, the only bank in town that still had a human teller. 

Inside, the bank was bustling. College kids in neon tank tops and board shorts clustered near the loan desks, giggling over their dwindling vacation funds. A frazzled mother tried to corral two toddlers while filling out a withdrawal slip. A pair of painters in splattered overalls leaned against the far wall, waiting their turn. The air smelled of sunscreen, sweat, and people ready to get on with their lives—standard for a Friday before lunch. 

Danny took his place in line behind a group of sorority girls, their tanned legs and designer sunglasses marking them as out-of-towners. One of them glanced back at him, did a quick scan of his cargo shorts and faded “Love Thy Neighbor” T-shirt, and offered a polite smile. He nodded in return, resisting the urge to crack a dad joke. 

Then the doors burst open. 

Three men in black ski masks stormed in, guns raised. 

“EVERYBODY ON THE GROUND! NOW!” 

Screams erupted. A teller dropped a stack of deposit slips. One of the college boys instinctively reached for his girlfriend—then froze as a robber jammed a pistol in his face. 

Danny dropped to his knees, hands raised, heart pounding. He’d done hospital visits, marriage counseling, even a eulogy for a local fisherman lost at sea. But this? This was new. 

The lead robber—tall, broad-shouldered, voice like gravel—kicked the door shut behind him. “No heroes. No alarms. You do what we say, you walk out alive.” 

Danny exhaled slowly. Okay. Stay calm. Watch. Wait. 

Then came the demand he hadn’t seen coming. 

“Clothes off. All of ’em.” 

There was stunned silence all around. 

“You heard me. Strip. Or we start shooting.” 

The gasps were almost comical. The sorority girls clutched at their sundresses. The mother let out a choked sob, pulling her children closer. The painters exchanged a look of disbelief. 

Danny, however, felt an odd flicker of recognition. 

Oh. 

This is about shame. 

And just like that, he knew exactly what he had to do. 

Without hesitation, he stood up—ignoring the robber’s shouted warning—and pulled his shirt over his head. 

Every eye in the bank locked onto him. 

The lead robber’s gun wavered. “The hell are you doing?” 

Danny smiled. “Following instructions.” 

Then he unbuckled his shorts. 


In “The Naked Shepherd,” the story only gets more tense from here as the hostages, forced at gunpoint to shed their clothes, begin to find a new kind of power. This is just one of the unique tales you’ll find in Stripped. You’ll also encounter:

  • The Weavers: In a town where clothes created social divides, a gruesome, unseen monster emerges from an ancient tar pit, meticulously weaving the skin and clothes of its victims into dreadful tapestries.
    Anatomy of Justice: A philosophical hiker arrested for indecent exposure ignites a firestorm in a conservative courtroom when he defends his right to be naked as a constitutional liberty.
  • Heart of the Forest: In an enchanted forest, a high elf tormented by shame journeys to a hidden grove to confront her deepest insecurities and discover a new kind of freedom.
  • Country Folk: A city woman moves to her husband’s family farm for a fresh start, only to discover their unconventional, unclad way of life challenges everything she believes about modesty and societal propriety.
  • The Skin Libraries: In a dystopian future where books are banned, a man uncovers a secret society of “Librarians” who have become living archives, tattooing forbidden stories onto their skin.

Every story is a journey into the raw, unfiltered core of humanity, and this is just the beginning. You can pre-order your copy here. Get ready to uncover what it means to be truly human.

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What About Modesty?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from the USA.
What about modesty? Is it possible to modest and nude?

Objection 1:
Modesty requires women to cover up.

People often read 1 Timothy 2:9 as “Women must dress modestly…” and they stop there, assuming they know the meaning.

They ignore the rest of the verse and believe it to be an instruction for women to cover up their bodies, instilling arbitrary rules and ignoring the historical context.

Does modesty mean cover up your body?

In Greco-Roman times, it was common for women to climb the social ladder by out-dressing everyone in the room. Whoever had the tallest hairstyle and the most expensive jewelry won!

Context is key when we read the rest of what Paul writes:

I also want the women to dress modestly, with decency and propriety, adorning themselves, not with elaborate hairstyles or gold or pearls or expensive clothes, but with good deeds, appropriate for women who profess to worship God.

1 Timothy 2:9

This text is not about exposing too much skin. It’s about church being a place for common ground and harmony, not a fashion show.


 Expulsion of Adam and Eve by Masaccio (Painted 1426-1428) altered in 1680 and restored in 1980
Expulsion of Adam and Eve by Masaccio (Painted 1426-1428) altered in 1680 and restored in 1980

The word “modesty” originally had nothing to do with clothes or covering up. As late as 1828, Webster’s Dictionary continued to define modesty without mentioning clothing.

Modesty died when false modesty was born.

Mark Twain

Eugene Peterson’s The Message got Paul’s idea across when he wrote that modesty is, “not primping before a mirror or chasing the latest fashions, but doing something beautiful for God and becoming beautiful doing it.”

Christian naturists believe that it is possible to be modest while one is completely nude, just as it is possible to be immodest while fully clothed. Naturist or not, modesty doesn’t require clothing. It only requires a heart that is humble before the King.

MIND RENUDE:
Modesty is an attitude, not a dress code.

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What is Uncovered Nakedness?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from Israel.
Discovering the meaning of the Hebrew idiom - uncovering nakedness

Objection 2:
We are commanded not to see other people’s nakedness.

In the 18th and 20th chapters of Leviticus, we are repeatedly instructed NOT to “uncover the nakedness of…” a long list of specific individuals.

It seems like a clear and simple prohibition against seeing other people naked. Perhaps it also means that we cannot be seen either?

We can determine the true meaning by agreeing to interpret Scripture carefully, with historical and grammatical context.

It Means Something Else

Bible scholars agree that uncovering nakedness is a Hebrew idiom. An idiom is something used in place of something else, such as “raining cats and dogs.” 

Evidently, scholars tell us that “uncover nakedness” always means “to participate in sexual intercourse.” Sometimes, it can also be a means of challenging rulership.

When you hear someone say, “I’m sleeping with so and so,” your cultural knowledge will tell you that they aren’t really sleeping. It’s a modern euphemism for sex.

Idioms and euphemisms often change across cultures and over time, so we should tread carefully when we discover one.

Going Modern

So, take a moment to pick up a modern translation of Scripture and flip to the verses in Leviticus chapters 18 and 20. Translators have updated them to read “Do not have sexual relations with….”

If you turn over to Leviticus 20:11, you get a double euphemism, but at least the modern writing is more clear!

The man who lies with his father’s wife has uncovered his father’s nakedness; both of them shall be put to death; their blood is upon them.

Leviticus 20:11

In reality, non-sexual nudity was commonplace in Bible times. Public nudity was normal. People bathed, worked, exercised, and played while naked. 

Bathers in the Forest (1897) by Pierre Auguste Renoir

God made us with these “skin suits” and they are perfect, just as they are. 

In conclusion, simple nakedness is simply not prohibited.

MIND RENUDE:
A prohibition against illicit sexual activity is not a prohibition against simple nudity.

Want to go deeper into what the Bible says about nakedness? Check this out!

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Why Did Israel’s Priests Wear Underwear?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from Canada.
What about leaders? Why did Israel's priests have to wear underwear?

Objection 3: If the priests had to wear underwear, we do too.

In the Book of Exodus, we read a curious set of instructions that God gave to the nation of Israel: priests could not climb stairs or ladders to get to the burning altar:

And you shall not go up by steps to my altar, that your nakedness be not exposed on it. ‭

Exodus‬ ‭20:26‬

Later, this requirement was changed, so that priests on duty were required to wear underwear:

You shall make for them linen undergarments to cover their naked flesh. They shall reach from the hips to the thighs.

Exodus‬ ‭28:42‬

Why did Israel’s priests wear underwear?

Biblical scholars agree that garments worn by everyone in those days were incredibly loose and easily blown aside. In order to set them apart for service, special undergarments were appointed during this time of worship. The people, of course, would still wear none.

But why such oddly specific requirements?

The answer is that God’s priests were required to be different from the pagan cultures around them. Those false religions included (and often required) sexual displays or intercourse as a key component of god or goddess worship. Not so, for Israel.

Was it the nudity… or the sex?

Given that priests were required to wear underwear while on duty, we may conclude that they did not do so while off duty. In fact, they might wear nothing.

Adjusting our lenses for historical norms reminds us that simple nudity was commonplace and underwear was novel.

Fresco in an ancient Jewish synagogue depicting Pharoah's Daughter when she finds Moses during her bath in the Nile River.  Moses would later bathe the Israeli priesthood. Fresco in an ancient Jewish synagogue depicting Pharoah's Daughter when she finds Moses during her bath in the Nile River. Why did God require those priests to wear underwear?
Fresco in an ancient Jewish synagogue depicting Pharoah’s Daughter when she finds Moses during her bath in the Nile River.

In fact, during a public ceremony before the men became priests, they appeared fully nude and unashamed before the entire nation of Israel. This fact runs in “stark” contrast to the idea that their nudity was offensive to God!

In Leviticus chapter eight, Moses gathers all of Israel together to introduce the newly designed priestly garments. As part of the public ceremony, he bathes the priests with water, one by one.

Their bodies having been purified, Moses then dresses them in their full uniforms, including the undergarments. Finally, he anoints them with oil.

It can also be inferred that those priestly garments are a metaphor prophesying Jesus, our High Priest. 

As you were baptized into Christ, [you] have put on Christ.

Galatians 3:27

In Colossians, Paul reminds us that we

have put off the old self with its practices, and we have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator.

Colossians 3:9-10

Now that we have “put on” the Lord Jesus, we are fully clothed at all times in His Righteousness. Under the law, Israel’s priests had to wear underwear, but Jesus has fulfilled the law.

Our earthly garments? Completely decorative!

Renewed Mind

MIND RENUDE:

Garments made for a specific time and task do not extend out a requirement for all times and peoples.

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God Made a Pattern?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from the USA.
God Covered Adam and Eve, but why?

Objection 4:
If God covered Adam and Eve after the Fall, this sets a pattern we should follow.

And the LORD God made for Adam and for his wife garments of skins and clothed them. 

Genesis 3:21

It seems like common sense that God would condone Adam and Eve’s sinful decision to cover themselves by replacing their fig leaves with animal skins. 

It’s also commonly believed that since God clothed Adam and Eve, He also put in place a commandment for people to always be clothed. 

Not so. When God hand-sculpted Adam and Eve nude, He “saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good.” 

The goodness of God’s creation did not change.

Adam and Eve by Moller
Adam and Eve (1891) by Harald Slott-Møller

Two Important Facts Stand Out

First, when God clothed Adam and Eve, there was no one on Earth from whom to hide their nudity. Otherwise, we would logically determine that married couples must never be nude in front of each other!

Second, there is no Scriptural support for the assertion that the garments God gave them were designed to correct a moral problem. God covered Adam and Eve out of His providence.

Rather, Scripture shows that clothing was provided to protect their vulnerable bodies from the new and hostile environment outside the Garden.  With its cold and thorny terrain, the skins God provided demonstrated His great kindness.

Up until modern times, clothing was understood to be used ornamentally and situationally. Our ancestors realized this.

We can also know that through the redemption of Jesus Christ, we are invited “back to the Garden” — into God’s presence — where we can again be “naked and unashamed.” 

The only “pattern” God made was that clothing is a gift – a tool to be used when it is needed. It is not, however, a requirement.

MIND RENUDE:
From His love and providence, God gave them clothing for the harsh new environment.

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Bathsheba Tempted David?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from the USA and Great Britain.
If Bathsheba tempted David, why was she an innocent lamb?

Objection 5:

Men have uncontrollable lust
at the sight of a nude woman.

Late one afternoon King David saw from the roof a woman bathing; and the woman was very beautiful…. So, David sent messengers and took her, and she came to him, and he lay with her.

2 Samuel 11:2,4

Many Christians believe that men have uncontrollable lust at the sight of a nude woman. Therefore, they reason, women should always cover themselves, so as not to cause a person to sin.

They believe that Bathsheba tempted David to sin when she bathed in public. Following this logic — and had Bathsheba kept her clothes on — David supposedly would not have broken the commandments against coveting, adultery and murder.

The same Christians would be shocked to know that until the 4th century, believer’s baptisms were conducted in public very much in the nude.

A mosaic depicting the baptism of Jesus the Christ on the ceiling of an ancient church
An ancient church ceiling mosaic depicting the nude baptism of Jesus Christ

Hippolytus of Rome, one of the most important second-third century Christian theologians, chronicled the common instructions for water baptism in 215 AD:

When they come to the water, [it] shall be pure and flowing... 
Then they shall take off all their clothes. 
The children shall be baptized first. ... 
After this, the men will be baptized. 
Finally, the women, after they have unbound their hair and removed their jewelry. 
No one shall take any foreign object with themselves down into the water…. 
Then, after these things, the bishop passes each of them on nude to the elder who stands at the water. 
They shall stand in the water naked. 
A deacon, likewise, will go down with them into the water.

After being immersed three separate times, 

When they have come up out of the water, they shall be anointed by the elder with the Oil of Thanksgiving, saying, ‘I anoint you with holy oil in the name of Jesus Christ.’ 

If it were true that the mere sight of a nude woman would cause a man to sin, surely early Christians would have conducted themselves differently! Perhaps it is we, the modern believers, who have seen sin where there is no sin!

Bathsheba’s bath was perfectly innocent. In fact, when Nathan reprimands David for HIS sin, he represents Bathsheba as an innocent lamb. 

Our Lord Jesus says:

For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander.

Matthew 15:19

Sin’s root is in the heart — not another person’s flesh.

MIND RENUDE:

A nude person is not the cause of another’s sin. It is the person’s own heart that needs to be cleansed.

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Public Nudity Shameful?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from the USA.
Is it shameful to be nude in public? How did ancient Israel handle it?

Objection 6:

We should never be seen without our clothes.

Behold, I come like a thief! Blessed is he who stays awake and keeps his tunic with him, that he may not go naked and be shamefully exposed.

Jesus, Revelation 16:15

It sure seems like this is an open and shut condemnation of shameful public nudity here, doesn’t it? After all, it says the words naked and shameful in the same verse! 

Modern Christians tend to immediately (and mistakenly) agree that nakedness automatically equals shamefulness.

But what is this verse really talking about?

Biblical scholar FF Bruce explains what readers would have once understood:

The captain of the temple in Jerusalem made his rounds of the precincts by night, and if a member of the temple police was caught asleep at his post, his clothes were confiscated and burned, and he was sent away naked in disgrace.

The symbolic picture here is that of being vigilant! It reminds us of how the Israelites were instructed in Egypt to eat the Passover:

With your cloak tucked into your belt, your sandals on your feet and your staff in your hand

Exodus 12:11
Passover Night
Marking the Doorposts on the Night of Passover (1919) by Adolf Hult

There was no time to undress for sleep that night! Instead of knee-jerk reactions, biblical interpretation requires more than one verse.

Sleeping naked was, and still is, a normal nightly state and this makes perfect sense.

If you’re a firefighter or a policeman, however, you have to be ready at a moment’s notice. We should likewise be ready – spiritually awake!

The book of Job tells us that humanity can be clothed with either “righteousness and justice” or with “shame.” 

Which would you rather wear? 

MIND RENUDE:

Symbolism is found throughout the Scriptures. God calls us to be “clothed with righteousness.” That kind of garment is not sold in any store!

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Nudity a Stumbling Block?

People from around the world helped make this video. It features voices from the USA.
how does nudity become a stumbling block?

Objection 7:

Seeing a person’s nudity forces the viewer to stumble into sin.

Therefore, let us not pass judgment on one another any longer, but rather decide never to put a stumbling block or hindrance in the way of a brother. 

Romans 14:13

Somehow, over the passage of time, this verse has morphed from being an instruction about unity and mutual upbuilding into an excuse to shame women for allowing their outer beauty to be seen or admired by others. 

Even though Paul instructs us in the preceding verses, Do not let what you regard as good be spoken of as evil,” people continue to regard female bodies as though dangerous and expect women to hide their shapeliness

While this passage is actually about the freedom to eat food sacrificed to idols, let’s work with the interpretation that a person’s body could be a stumbling block to “weaker” brethren. 

If you find someone attractive or notice their outer beauty, have you already committed adultery in your heart? Does the ability to curb lustful thinking really depend on another person’s wardrobe?

A Body is Not a Stumbling Block

Keep reading. Paul is trying to instruct us that liberty welcomes growth. He says,

As for the one who is weak in faith, welcome him, but not to quarrel over opinions.

Romans 14:1

And to the weaker person, he asks:

Who are you to pass judgment on the servant of another? It is before his own master that he stands or falls. And he will be upheld, for the Lord is able to make him stand.

Romans 14:3

Shaming our bodies leads to self-devaluation, depression, and dysfunction.

Shame creates distance in relationships (including with God).

Shame steals intimacy and prevents us from experientially knowing and loving others deeply.

These verses should never be used to uphold weakness as though it were righteous. 

Hebrews 5 and 6 teach us that as Christians, we are to move on from childish milk and grow to eat meat in maturity — not to stay stuck in childish, weak ways forever. 

 Isn’t it time to grow up?

MIND RENUDE:

Weakness is not righteousness.
Liberty welcomes growth.