A small press, a long view,
a very old subject.
Goose Say Enough is a correspondence for Christians who want help growing up in Christ — in marriage, in family life, in the ordinary friendships and responsibilities that fill the calendar. We write letters, print them, and put them in the mail.
What we are trying to do
There is no shortage of Christian content. There is a real shortage of Christian writing that treats you like an adult and is worth keeping on a shelf. Our aim is narrow: to write letters that help ordinary believers do the ordinary work of obedience — as husbands, wives, parents, children, friends, and neighbors — better, slower, and with more of the Bible in view.
We are not trying to be viral. We are not trying to be clever. We are trying to do one thing well: put something in your mailbox each month that, a year from now, you would still want to read.
Who writes the letters
The letters are written by a small circle of writers who are themselves husbands, wives, and parents — pastors, teachers, and ordinary churchgoers who have been doing this long enough to have scars and seasoned convictions. Every letter is edited under a single editorial hand to keep the voice consistent: direct, warm, biblical, not breezy.
Our editorial rule
“Is this letter more biblical, more charitable, and more useful than what the reader would otherwise read this week? If not, do not send it.”
Why paper, and why mail
An email notification is pressure. A screen is a queue of things demanding a response. A letter is none of that. It waits. You open it when you are ready. You read it with a pencil. You put it on the shelf, or you hand it to your spouse, or you throw it out — but you have had an actual encounter with it.
In an age drowning in AI-generated text, we think the medium of the printed letter does something honest: it makes the writer work harder, and it lets the reader work slower. Both are good.
What we believe
We stand in historic, confessing Protestant Christianity. We affirm the authority and sufficiency of Scripture; salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone; the goodness of marriage, family, and the local church; and the created distinction, dignity, and complementary callings of men and women.
The letters are written in that frame. They are not denominational, and they are not a substitute for the preaching and ministry of a local church. They are meant to help you do that — love the household you are in, and the church you belong to — better.