Edrice Angry: When God Calls You Into the Unfamiliar

Apryl Morin
Apryl Morin
April 14, 2026
6 min read
Edrice Angry: When God Calls You Into the Unfamiliar

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Edrice Angry could take the easier path. With her strong background in education and years of experience serving others, she could step back into something comfortable—something she already knows how to do. Instead, she's knee-deep in certifications, and the operational maze of launching Delfiini-Merenneito Spa and Wellness Essentials, LLC, an organic skincare company that stretches her in entirely new directions.

Why press forward when the familiar feels safer? Because she believes God called her here.

That conviction—that quiet, persistent sense of divine direction—is what keeps her moving when the learning curve steepens and the to-do list multiplies. For Angry, faith isn't a Sunday supplement to her work. It's the bedrock beneath every decision, every late night, every moment of uncertainty.

A Foundation Built on Transformation

Edrice's story doesn't start with entrepreneurship. It starts with survival, then salvation. Saved at 14 years old in the wake of an abusive home and a rough childhood, she found herself on a different trajectory entirely. That moment of conversion didn't erase the past, but it redirected the future.

"I was saved when I was 14 years old, and that changed the direction of my life. Since then, I have continually tried to give back, keep growing, and use my life in a way that honors God."

Education became her anchor. A lifelong learner, Angry has spent years growing in knowledge, experience, and service. That commitment to learning didn't just shape her career—it shaped her character. She became someone who believes growth is never finished, that there's always another layer of understanding to pursue, another way to serve more effectively.

Now, that same hunger for growth is propelling her into uncharted territory: building a business from the ground up.

Leadership as Stewardship, Not Just Strategy

For Edrice, leadership isn't about control or visibility. It's about stewardship—using what God has given her in a way that blesses others. She's spent years serving her church behind the scenes, helping with presentations, writing emails, supporting efforts that move the mission forward. It's quiet work. It's faithful work.

And it's taught her something critical: operations aren't just about getting tasks done. They're about honoring the gifts you've been entrusted with.

That mindset carries directly into her new venture. Launching Delfiini-Merenneito beauty products isn't just a business play—it's an act of obedience. The technical details, the administrative hurdles, the steep learning curve? All part of the process. All part of the calling.

"It would be easier for me to go back into something that feels comfortable or familiar, but I really believe God is calling me to move forward with this business. Because of that, I am staying the course."

This is where faith and business stop being separate categories. When you believe God has directed your steps, the hard parts don't disqualify you—they refine you. The unfamiliarity isn't a sign you're off track. It's proof you're stretching into something bigger than what you already know.

When the Familiar Feels Safer Than the Faithful

Most Christian leaders face this tension at some point: the pull between what's proven and what's possible. You know what worked before. You know where your strengths lie. Stepping into something new—especially something that requires learning an entirely new skill set—feels risky. Maybe even reckless.

But what if the risk isn't in moving forward? What if the real risk is staying put when God has already moved ahead?

Angry's choice to press into the skincare business, despite the complexity and the unfamiliarity, is a case study in faithful obedience. She's not ignoring wisdom or charging ahead recklessly. She's doing the work—navigating certifications, sorting through regulations, learning the operational side of a product-based business. But she's doing it anchored in a conviction that this is where she's supposed to be.

Faith doesn't exempt you from the grind. It sustains you through it.

Practical Obedience: What to Do Monday Morning

So what does this look like in practice? How do you discern between a God-given calling and a distraction? How do you keep moving when the learning curve feels overwhelming?

Start here: Go back to what God told you. Angry's advice to Christian business leaders is simple and surgical: "When you feel discouraged or weighed down, remember that God is in control. He has a plan for your life, and He has given you a vision and a mission. Go back to that when things get hard."

Write it down. Keep it visible. When the operational complexity threatens to swallow your sense of purpose, return to the original conviction. What did God say? What did He show you? What did you know to be true before the details got messy?

Then, do the next right thing. Angry isn't waiting for clarity on every step before she moves. She's handling organizational documents and designing products. She's securing certifications. She's learning as she goes, because obedience often looks like faithful persistence in the mundane.

The Long View: Time, Talent, and Resources as Worship

For Angry, every resource—time, talent, treasure—is filtered through a single question: What is God calling me to do with this?

That's not legalism. It's freedom. When you anchor your investments in divine direction rather than cultural pressure or personal ambition, you stop second-guessing every decision. You stop comparing your timeline to someone else's. You stop measuring success by metrics that don't matter in eternity.

Her volunteer work, her service at church, her willingness to use her gifts behind the scenes—all of it flows from the same conviction that drives her business. It's all stewardship. It's all worship.

And it's all preparing her for what's next.

Stay the Course

Edrice Angry is building something new, and it's not easy. But she's not looking for easy. She's looking for faithful. She's staying the course, not because she has all the answers, but because she knows the One who does.

If you're standing at the edge of something unfamiliar—something that would be easier to avoid—ask yourself this: Is this discomfort a red flag, or is it the growing pain that comes with obedience?

Sometimes God calls us into the unfamiliar not to confuse us, but to stretch us. Not to overwhelm us, but to grow us into who He's always intended us to be.

Keep going. Keep pushing ahead. And when it gets hard, go back to what He told you.

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Written by

Apryl Morin

KF Coach near Lambertville, MI.

Interview with

Edrice Angry

Founder at Delfiini-Merenneito Spa and Wellness Essentials

Las Veegas, NV

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