In Episode 115—“Vigilance”—I shared how living in a distracted, fast-moving culture erodes what matters most: our faith, our families, and our freedom. I realized that vigilance isn’t just a buzzword—it’s a biblical prescription for spiritual health and lasting impact.
Scripture doesn’t say “be careless.” It issues a clarion call: be on guard. Be alert. Because if we don’t watch our inner lives and our homes, the enemy prowls. If we don’t guard what’s entrusted to us—faith, family, freedom—we can lose them piece by piece.
This post explores how vigilance fortifies your relationship with God, closeness with loved ones, and your liberty—empowered always by reliance on Jesus Christ.
1. What the Bible Means by Vigilance
1 Peter 5:8–10 – Stand Strong in Faith
“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. Resist him, steadfast in the faith…”
Peter warns us that spiritual opposition is real and active. The call to vigilance isn’t fear-mongering—it’s awareness. But we’re not alone: we’re reinforced by grace, by community, and by endurance that comes through faith.
Watchfulness in the Gospels
Jesus tells His disciples:
“Watch and pray so that you may not enter into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.” (Matthew 26:41)
And earlier:
“Be vigilant at all times and pray that you may have strength to escape all these things that are going to take place…” (Luke 21:36)
His words remind us: alertness paired with prayer is our defense against slipping into sin, apathy, or spiritual drift.
Guard Your Heart
Proverbs urges:
“Keep your heart with all vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life.”
If your heart governs your life, then defending it is essential. Vigilance protects vital wells of faith, love, and purpose.
2. Vigilance and the Protection of Faith
A. Staying Rooted Against Deception
Satan wants to erode your belief—through doubt, distraction, or smooth lies. Vigilance is not paranoia—it’s clarity. When your heart is grounded in the truths of Christ, you’re naturally discerning. You don’t chase every new idea—you test, you pray, and you stand firm.
B. Sustaining Faith in a Shifting Culture
We live in a moment when values shift overnight. Choices once taken for granted—like truth, sacrifice, biblical fidelity—are now debated. Staying vigilant means staying connected to Scripture, prayer, and Christian community so that core faith isn’t influenced by cultural tides.
C. Trusting Jesus as Foundation
Vigilance anchors, not frays, when rooted in trust. You don’t watch the horizon out of fear—you watch because you know the One you follow is faithful. Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever. So vigilance becomes worship, not worry.
3. Vigilance in Protecting Your Family
A. Watching Over the Heart of Home
Families flourish when parents guard not just behaviors—but hearts. Proverbs tells us family culture grows from the springs within. Vigilance means modeling truth, humility, confession, accountability, grace—for ourselves and our children.
B. Connecting with Purpose
Keep faith and freedom central: family devotions, shared prayers, open conversations about moral boundaries. Don’t slack off when “things are good”—that’s precisely when slipping begins.
C. Lead with Love and Leadership
Vigilance in the home means spiritual leadership isn’t about control—but shepherding hearts toward Christ. We stay watchful, but we lead with love, not force, showing that faith and family flourish through mutual submission to Jesus.
4. Vigilance as the Cost of Freedom
A. Freedom Must Be Guarded
Thomas Jefferson famously said, “Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom.” The Bible echoes: spiritual freedom must be guarded. Paul says in Galatians 5:1:
“Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.”
If freedom is precious, then vigilance preserves it.
B. Freedom Easily Erodes
Without vigilance, freedom becomes indulgence. We fall into patterns—whether in cultural captivity or personal comfort—that remove us from Christ’s freeing presence.
C. Guard Through Discernment
Discernment doesn’t come from full knowledge—it comes from a sober mind, a clear heart, and prayerful dependence. When you guard what you believe, who you follow, and where you’re going—you protect real freedom.
5. Practical Steps for Vigilance
Here’s how I’ve begun to cultivate vigilance in faith, family, and freedom:
Daily Moments of Stillness and Prayer Rise early—or pause midday—for simple prayers: “Jesus, keep our hearts alert to what’s real and good.”
Scripture Anchors I memorize verses like 1 Peter 5:8, Luke 21:36, Proverbs 4:23. These form spiritual watchmen across my heart.
Regular Heart Checks I journal quarterly: “What distractions are creeping in? Where have I become numb? What am I compromising on?” Clarity comes when I write.
Family Faith Rhythms We have weekly “faith nights”—scripture readings, stories, prayers. It’s not perfect but it’s protective.
Community Connection I stay accountable through trusted friends and church. We pray for each other’s watches to stay lit.
Learn Spiritual Warfare, Don’t Fear It Ephesians 6 reminds us: put on the whole armor of God. Vigilance arms us—not with fear, but with truth, faith, peace, and identity in Christ.
6. The Heartbeat of Vigilance: Trusting in Jesus
Vigilance without trust is anxiety.
But when your watchfulness is grounded in Jesus—His faithfulness, His sovereignty—it becomes confident clarity.
I’ve learned to pray: “Lord, I’m watching not because I fear slipping, but because I love You, I cherish my home, I value the freedom that You bought for me.” That prayer turns vigilance into worship.
7. Invitation: Charge Forward with Eyes Open
Let me encourage you: vigilance isn’t living in dread. It’s living awake. It’s living with purpose.
Guard your faith by anchoring in Scripture.
Guard your family by leading with grace and presence.
Guard your freedom by discernment and discipline.
Remember: you’re not guarding alone. Christ is on the watchtower of your soul.
Conclusion: Vigilance Becomes Victory
Vigilance is biblical. It’s beautiful. It’s our call to protect what matters—before it’s too late.
“Be sober. Be watchful.” That’s not just doctrine—it’s daily spiritual posture.
When we live vigilant, we hold fast to faith, stand firm for family, and walk faithfully in freedom—grounded always in Jesus Christ.
As I recorded Episode 114—“What Does Heaven Look Like”—I realized that many of us yearn for a concrete image of that eternal home. We’ve seen cameo portrayals in movies or heard poetic homilies—but what does Scripture truly reveal? And more importantly, how do we step into its promise?
In this post, I want to explore Heaven through a biblical lens: the vivid descriptions in Revelation, the invitation of Jesus, and the daily hope that transforms how we live. My prayer is simple: may you be encouraged to see not only a destination—but a loving invitation to dwell with our Savior.
1. Biblical Portrait of Heaven: A City Like No Other
The New Jerusalem Revealed
Revelation 21 and 22 paint a striking vision of Heaven as the New Jerusalem—a city descending from God, the bride beautifully adorned for her Groom. Its streets are of pure gold, shining like translucent glass; its walls are built from jasper and precious gems; the gates are pearls, one per tribe of Israel.
Foundations lined with gemstones—jasper, sapphire, emerald, topaz, amethyst—and gates of single pearls evoke majesty and purity.
Garden of Peace and Life
At its heart flows the river of life, clear as crystal, emerging from the throne of God and the Lamb. There, on both sides, grows the Tree of Life, bearing twelve kinds of fruit—year‑round—and its leaves are for the healing of nations.
God Is Central—No Temple Needed
There is no temple in this city, for God and the Lamb are its temple. Day and night there’s no need for sun or moon; God’s glory illuminates everything, and the Lamb Himself is its lamp.
Heaven of Comfort and Presence
Heaven promises the end of suffering: “He will wipe away every tear… no more death or mourning or crying or pain”. It is a place of perfect presence and belonging—our Redeemer dwelling with us eternally.
2. The Throne Room: Where Majesty Meets Worship
Revelation 4 gives a glimpse into heaven’s throne room—God enthroned in splendor, surrounded by twenty-four elders in white robes and golden crowns, and living creatures singing “Holy, holy, holy” day and night . A sea of crystal glass, cherubic figures, and radiant worship echo divine sovereignty.
This scene isn’t performance—it’s the heartbeat of heaven: God enthroned, creation in worship, unbroken communion with His people.
3. How Do We Get There? The Only Way According to Scripture
Jesus: The Way to the Father
When we talk about heaven, we must talk about how to get there. Scripture is clear: Jesus is the only way. In John 14:6, He said, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me”.
Salvation by Grace Through Faith
Eternal life isn’t earned; it’s received. Paul reminds us that we enter heaven through justification, not our effort—as God’s righteousness covers us when we trust Christ.
Romans 10:9–10 reinforces that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him, you will be saved.
Repentance, Faith, Assurance
We’re invited to acknowledge our sin, repent, trust in Christ’s atoning work, and believe. As one resource outlines: admit you’re a sinner, repent, believe Jesus died and rose, and invite Him into your life.
Jesus’ Narrow Gate
He refers to the entrance into life as a narrow gate, warning that many choose easier paths that lead elsewhere. Faith in Christ is both the invitation and the road home.
4. Envisioning Heaven Influences How We Live Now
Hope Anchored in Eternity
When I meditate on heaven’s promise—the Tree of Life, streets of gold—it’s not fantasy. It’s hope that helps me endure hardships, losses, and disappointments. It reorients my perspective from temporal to eternal.
Motivation for Holy Living
Knowing God’s light fills everything changes how we treat one another now. If someday every tear will be wiped away, then today I choose tenderness. If Jesus is our lamp, then I aim to reflect His light.
Purpose Beyond Present Pain
Life has seasons filled with grief or weariness. But heaven reminds us: this is not all there is. Our labor, love, and longing aren’t lost—they point toward a place of restoration and joy.
5. A Personal Reflection: Longing and Assurance
When I softly replay Episode 114 in my mind, I feel both awe and longing. Awe at a home beyond imagination; longing that quiet yet sacred pull in the soul toward belonging and beauty.
I don’t know all the details—and Revelation’s language is often symbolic. But I believe Jesus is real, these visions are true, and I’m on the way. And you are too—if you have Him at your center.
6. How to Begin Your Journey Toward Heaven
Step 1: Know Jesus Personally
If you’re journeying toward hope, step one is relationship—not religion. Confess, believe, receive. (Romans 10:9, John 14:6.)
Step 2: Live With Heaven in View
Let heaven’s hope shape daily choices—how you love, forgive, persevere. Heaven isn’t an escape—it’s a destination that infuses purpose now.
Step 3: Anchor in Scripture
Write down passages: Revelation’s Jerusalem (21–22), John’s invitation, Romans’ salvation. Revisit them when your faith needs reassurance.
Step 4: Share the Vision
Speak about Heaven’s hope with friends, church, your family. Spread more than doctrine—spread the longing for God’s perfect presence.
Conclusion: A Future Worth Imagining, a Savior Worth Trusting
Heaven, as depicted in Scripture, is breathtaking:
Streets of jasper and gold like glass,
The Tree of Life and the healing it brings,
God’s light radiating endlessly,
Worship that never ends.
But it’s not a fairy tale to ponder lightly—it’s a future secured through Jesus.
How do we get there? Not by virtue, but through repentance, faith in Christ, and inviting Him into our lives. And today, that hope should shape us—comforting us, guiding us, and calling us to live as though heaven is worth believing in.
So if your heart wonders, Do I have a place there?—yes. If your spirit aches in this world—hold fast. If your loved one’s death feels too heavy—one day, God will wipe away pain.
Let our hope be more than wishful thinking. Let it root us in Jesus and push us to share this beautiful promise: Heaven is real, and we can look forward to it—because Jesus is real, and He is with us now.
Anxiety has been my constant companion—sometimes a whisper, other times a tidal wave. In Episode 113—“Dealing With Anxiety”—I realized that anxiety isn’t something to defeat through sheer willpower but through cultivating trust in Christ and transforming my mind. That journey brought me back to Paul’s letter to the Philippians—one of Scripture’s most profound resources on mental and emotional well-being.
Paul didn’t write this letter from a place of peace—it was penned from prison, under duress, with every reason to feel anxious. Yet in it, he models a peace so deep it surprised me. Through Philippians, I discovered not just management techniques, but a lifeline: how to align my anxious thoughts with Jesus’ steadfast presence.
This post explores how Philippians guides us through anxiety—from prayer to renewal of mind and preventative practices—empowered always by the most important reality: trusting in our Lord Jesus.
1. Turning Worry into Prayer: Philippians 4:6–7
Paul’s words in Philippians 4:6–7 are some of the most quoted verses in Scripture for anxious hearts:
“Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
This isn’t a call to suppress anxiety, but an invitation to transform it. Prayer becomes the act of turning a burden into a dialogue—with transparency, vulnerability, and gratitude.
One reflection explains that obeying this isn’t about self-effort; it’s about entrusting our hearts to the Lord, who responds with a peace so profound it exceeds our understanding—and that peace will guard us.
My Practice in Prayer:
I consciously say out loud what’s weighing on me—work worries, relational tension, health fears.
Then I shift to thanksgiving, even something small: a friend’s message, a moment of clarity, a favorite song.
Often, I sense a tangibly calm presence—not because circumstances changed, but because my focus shifted to His character.
2. Renewing the Mind with Philippians 4:8
Paul knew anxiety starts in our thoughts. So he redirects us:
“Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.”
This isn’t passive reflection—it’s an act of discipline. Choose what your mind dwells on. Truth, purity, loveliness—such focus changes inner atmosphere.
My Thought-Shift Routine:
When worry creeps in, I pause and name one “true” thought: “God is with me.”
Then I look for something “lovely”—a scripture, a memory, a quiet moment.
I repeat with one more “praiseworthy” focus before returning to tasks—anchored now, not anxious.
3. Understanding Context: Why Paul Could Say “Don’t Be Anxious”
Paul didn’t say these things lightly. He wrote Philippians from prison—under threat, uncertainty, and separation from the people he loved.
A commentary reminds us: this isn’t blatant denial of anxiety. Instead, it’s grounded in deep reliance on the Spirit—a grace-enabled calm amid real trials.
How This Changes My Perspective:
I stop comparing my anxiety to others’.
I acknowledge it’s real but not final.
I ask—not for denial of difficulty—but spiritual strength to face it.
4. Strategies for Managing Anxiety
A. Immediate Strategies for Overwhelmed Moments:
Pray transparently—bring specifics, not just generic fears.
Thank God for something specific—even small grace matters.
Take a physical pause—walk outside, breathe, let your body reset.
Refocus thoughts with Philippians 4:8 themes—actively redirect your mind.
B. Preventative Habits to Build Resilience:
Daily habit of journaling—notes of gratitude and truth.
Memorize Philippians 4:6–7—setting it as a mental anchor.
Create ritual—a morning or evening rhythm of prayer + Philippians reading.
Community connection—share honest prayers with a trusted friend or small group.
5. Trusting Jesus: The Foundation of Peace
Underlying all of Paul’s instruction is this: Jesus is near, He cares, and He sustains.
One reflection emphasizes our relationship with God—not self-help or surface platitudes—is the antidote to worry. Prayer plus thanksgiving reveals our dependence is not weakness but trust.
Walking in Trust Daily:
Remind myself, Jesus is real and present, not distant.
When anxiety nags, I whisper, Jesus, I trust You.
Use the landscape of Philippians as both mirror and map—truth to see my need, hope to lead me forward.
6. Stories from Scripture: Paul’s Peace in Prison
In prison, Paul wrote about rejoicing, contentment, and serving Christ joyfully—despite threat and uncertainty.
His lived experience pulled me from conceptualizing anxiety into spiritual formation. If Paul could rejoice amid chains, I could walk forward in relative discomfort—with peace.
7. Reflecting on Anxiety, Not Avoiding It
If you rush past anxiety by refusing to acknowledge it, you miss God’s invitation.
Philippians doesn’t say “don’t feel anxious”; it guides us to not be shaped by anxiety. It invites us to notice it, navigate through it, and redirect toward Jesus.
Personal Takeaway:
I started labeling anxious thoughts as “not from the Spirit.”
Then I pause—pray Psalm 46:10, or whisper Philippians 4:7.
Then I journal or walk away—not running from anxiety, but redirecting from it.
8. Preventative Spiritual Fitness
Think of spiritual habits like emotional vitamins.
Regular prayers with thanksgiving create immunity.
Meditating on verses like Philippians 4:6–9 sets a guard around your heart.
*Community, worship, and confessing your anxiety—don’t walk that path alone.
Conclusion: Trust Jesus, Take Every Thought Captive
Here’s the truest freedom I’ve found:
Anxiety is real—don’t deny it.
But God offers a different reality: prayer that reshapes, thoughts that reflect truth, peace that protects—and a Savior who walks with us.
In Episode 113, I confessed that habitual anxiety isn’t defeated, it’s navigated—with Jesus as the guiding compass. Philippians isn’t just a chapter—it’s an invitation to live anchored, not anxious.
Take the next step:
Memorize 4:6–7.
Journal one thanksgiving every day.
Share your journey with someone who cares.
This isn’t about elimination—it’s about transformation. Trusting Jesus doesn’t stop storms—but it strengthens you to walk through them in peace.
When I sat down to record “Where to Begin”, Episode 112 of my podcast, I realized something powerful: most of us hesitate to open the Bible because we feel unsure, intimidated, or distant. Whether you’re brand new to faith or simply wanting to renew your spiritual journey, the most important first step is simple: start.
Declaring “I’m going to begin reading the Bible,” radical as it sounds in a busy world, is stepping into a relationship with our Savior. This post is an invitation—to help you take that first step, build sustainable rhythms, and embrace the grace that sees every new start.
1. Why It’s More Important to Begin Than to Know the Whole Plan
Too many feel pressure to have a perfect plan before opening God’s Word—when actually, God desires presence and humility more than perfection.
Starting—even in small doses—creates momentum. Reading one passage with prayer opens space for revelation. Consistency matters more than speed. As one guide encouragingly said, starting with 10–15 minutes a day builds spiritual stamina and helps you engage relationally, not just informationally Open the Biblekeithferrin.com.
2. Choose a Starting Point That Anchors You in Jesus
Begin with the Gospels
If you’re new, start with the Gospels—John, Matthew, Mark, Luke—in that order or sequence you prefer. They intimately introduce Jesus—His life, teachings, character, and love for humanity Reddit.
Why John first?
John presents Jesus as Savior and Son of God with rich, relational language. Then dive into the others for historical depth and narrative breadth.
Consider Acts Next
After a Gospel or two, turn to Acts, which picks up after Jesus, revealing how the early church responded to Jesus’ mission and moves forward with Spirit-led life Open the Bible+2keithferrin.com+2Reddit+2.
3. Practical Habits for Beginners and Those Restarting
🕰️ Set a Daily Time and Place
Pick a consistent window—early morning or evening—that you can honor. Keep it simple: a comfortable chair, Bible, journal, pen, maybe a cup of coffee. Even 10 minutes is powerful when repeated daily shiningeverbrighter.com+6Ascension Press Media+6keithferrin.com+6.
🙏 Start with Prayer and an Open Heart
Invite the Holy Spirit: “Father, speak to me. Open my eyes.” Don’t skip this step—God’s Word meets you where you are spiritually, but the Spirit makes it alive and applicable Reddit+2Open the Bible+2Ascension Press Media+2.
📖 Read Relationally, Not Rigorously
Avoid making every reading feel like homework. Track themes, not just every lesson. Let the story draw you in. As one guide explained: reading relationally helps you feast with God, not just study Him keithferrin.com.
📓 Journal Thoughts, Themes, or Questions
Write down what surprised you, what comforted you, or what challenged you. This helps you internalize and reflect later.
👥 Invite a Companion or Community
If possible, partner with one or two people reading the same passage—or join a small group. It fosters accountability and shared discovery keithferrin.comFaithGateway.
4. Tackling Overwhelm—Strategies to Sustain Momentum
✅ Use a Reading Rhythm
Begin with 10–15 minutes per day or select a portion (a chapter, narrative section). If that feels light, extend to 20–30 minutes. The aim is consistency, not intensity Open the Biblekeithferrin.com.
🧭 The “New Disciple Challenge” Approach
Spend two weeks in each Gospel and Acts; repeat Acts between each Gospel. In 10‑week cycles, you revisit foundational themes and grow familiarity across the life of Jesus and early church keithferrin.com.
🔄 Mix Genres for Engagement
If the Gospels feel too straightforward after a while, add in Psalms for prayer-rich engagement or Proverbs for bite‑size wisdom. This keeps the journey fresh and multidimensional FaithGatewayshiningeverbrighter.com.
5. Cultivating Relationship Over Religion
🤝 See Jesus in Every Page
Beyond theology, see Jesus in the people He healed, taught, and loved. From Mark or Luke, visualize His compassion. From John, sense His intimate presence. Let His humanity and divinity draw you deeper.
💡 Reflect and Respond in Prayer
Close your reading time by asking: “How did You speak today? What are You leading me toward?” A relational rhythm helps you respond rather than just observe.
🎯 Small Goals Grow Big Faith
A chapter a day lays over time into completion. Two months in, you’ll know the Gospels intimately. Six months in, you’ll have a foundation you can build on.
6. Addressing Common Concerns
“I feel lost—too much to understand.” Be patient. The Bible is not meant to be mastered at once. Read trustingly—God’s Spirit will teach you over time. Don’t compare yourself to others’ pace or style.
“I’m restarting—is it too late or too hard?” Starting over is brave. Approach with fresh expectancy. The same discipline you develop will feel familiar after a few weeks, renewing your relationship with God.
“I don’t know what Bible version to use.” Pick a readable translation (e.g., NIV, ESV, NLT). The best Bible is the one you’ll actually open and hold. If one version feels dry, try another until something clicks Ascension Press MediaSara Laughed.
7. The Transformative Power of Simply Beginning
The greatest spiritual growth often comes from the smallest steps forward. When I began consistently reading Scripture—even when I felt dry, tired, or distracted—I started noticing God’s voice in new ways. My faith got anchored in narrative, not novelty.
I discovered hope in Jesus’ teachings, conviction in His commands, peace in the Psalms, and direction in Acts. I found joy not in finishing books—but in meeting Him there each day.
To someone new: your first verse may feel insignificant. But it’s not just ink—it’s life. When you open your heart to Him, He meets you. Over time, casual reading becomes spiritual formation.
8. Invitation: Begin Today
Here’s your personal invitation:
Pick where to start: John or Matthew, then Acts.
Choose your time and spot: 10–15 minutes today.
Pray first: Ask God to open and meet you.
Journal a reflection: One insight or question.
Connect weekly: With someone or a group, if you can.
Don’t worry if it’s imperfect. Just begin. Each morning you open your Bible can become an invitation into deeper relationship—with Jesus, more understanding, and greater spiritual momentum.
Conclusion: A First Step Toward Lifelong Relationship
The Bible is not only God’s Word—it’s His invitation. It speaks beauty, truth, hope, and redemption. The most important thing isn’t how fast you read or how well you understand—it’s the posture of your heart. Begin. Continue. Trust. Believe that Jesus walks with you.
Just start. And watch how He meets you in each chapter, verse, or line. Over time, those small steps become a journey of faith that transforms your heart—because God is faithful to reveal Himself to those who seek intentionally.
On Episode 110 of my podcast—“How to Pray”—I realized something profound: many of us approach prayer like ordering off a menu—“God, bless this,” “God, fix that.” But prayer is so much more than that. It’s a conversation—and like any meaningful exchange, structure matters.
Structured prayer doesn’t mean formulaic. Instead, it creates space for deeper intimacy, honest reflection, and spiritual growth. In this post, I’ll share why the A.C.T.S. method—Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, Supplication—can revolutionize your prayers. Not by making God more predictable, but by inviting Him into deeper parts of your heart.
By the end, you’ll see why this framework can elevate your prayer life and strengthen your bond with God.
What Is the A.C.T.S. Method? A Brief Overview
A.C.T.S. is a time-tested acronym guiding believers through four spiritual rhythms in prayer:
Thanksgiving – Gratitude for His blessings and presence.
Supplication – Lifting our needs and praying for others.
This approach helps avoid disconnected or “wish list” prayer times. Instead, each part anchors your heart, aligning your focus with God’s, and builds toward a deeper, more balanced conversation.
Why Structure Enhances Prayer
Some might say structured prayer is soulless or rigid. But structure can be a pathway, not a prison.
It keeps your mind engaged, avoiding emotional wandering.
It ensures you don’t neglect any spiritual posture—worship, repentance, gratitude, petition.
It prepares your heart to receive from God, not just talk to Him.
As one resource noted, ACTS “helps us exchange our concerns for God’s perspective, balancing personal needs with worship and thanksgiving”
Personally, I find structure liberating. Instead of wandering aimlessly, my prayers begin with worship, move through repentance, overflow in thanks, and then land in honest requests. That framework invites clarity and peace—every single time.
A – Adoration: Start with His Majesty
Prayer posture begins with worship.
When we adore God, we shift the focus from us to Him. It’s about who He is—His character, power, faithfulness. Adoration realigns our hearts, humbles our attitudes, and opens spiritual eyes.
One guide explained:
“When we pray with adoration … we are declaring the glory of God’s majesty and beauty of who He is.”
During Episode 110, I described pausing after “Our Father who art in heaven” and saying to myself: You are good. You are just. You are my provider, my protector. That moment of simple adoration often sets the tone for everything that follows.
C – Confession: Honest Repentance Opens Hearts
Once our hearts are lifted toward His greatness, we’re prepared to face our shortcomings.
Confession isn’t about guilt—it’s about honesty, freedom, and restoration. James 5:16 reminds us: “The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective…” when it’s humble and transparent.
One guide said:
“When you confess, … ask God to search your heart and reveal any hidden sin.”
During confession, be specific. I’ve often begun prayers simply with, “Search me, Lord.” But when I name my struggles—impatience, pride, anxiety—that specificity brings clarity, healing, and God’s mercy.
T – Thanksgiving: Cultivating a Heart of Gratitude
Humans often forget. We complain easily, even amid blessings.
That’s why thanksgiving is vital. Psalm 100:4 teaches us to “enter His gates with thanksgiving.” And after confession, gratitude is healing balm.
Structured thanksgiving helps us remember:
What is going well?
What lessons have I learned?
What gifts—big or small—has God given?
A source highlighted that thanksgiving:
“forces me to consider what I am grateful for on the days I feel less than grateful.”
For me, listing even mundane blessings—the cool air, a friend’s message, a moment of clarity—shifts perspective and brings joy to prayer.
S – Supplication: Pouring Out Our Needs and Others’
Finally, after focusing on God, we bring our heart’s burdens and intercessions to Him.
Supplication is not about demanding—it’s about trust. Scripture tells us to “present your requests to God” with thanksgiving (Philippians 4:6). We ask boldly and humbly.
As described:
“Supplication … making requests of God … ‘Come show me the path forward on a major decision…’”
This step acknowledges that we need Him—for ourselves, others, our world. And it reminds us of our dependence on divine grace.
How A.C.T.S. Builds a Stronger Relationship with God
1. Makes Prayer Relational, Not Ritual
Continuously hitting repeat on the same prayer formula can become rote. But ACTS, when used sincerely, reconnects you to a living God—one you know, love, confess to, and depend upon.
2. Creates Balanced Spiritual Posture
Adoration keeps us humble. Confession keeps us honest. Thanksgiving keeps us grateful. Supplication keeps us reliant. A.C.T.S. ensures prayers aren’t unbalanced, self-centered, or superficial.
3. Transforms Your Inner Condition
Adoration fills with worship; confession clears shame; thanksgiving cultivates contentment; supplication fosters hope. That personal shift strengthens our intimacy with God.
One resource explained:
“As you spend time … adoring God, confessing … and thanking … a transformation takes place in your relationship with Him. You become expectant and confident …”
4. Anchors You in God’s Perspective
When anxiety hits, ACTS reorients you—not to your problems, but to God’s character and faithfulness, your own need for cleansing, reasons to be thankful, and the freedom to ask for help.
How I Use ACTS in My Life: A Personal Narrative
Here’s how it really unfolds for me:
A by Morning Light: I start my quiet time with worship songs or silent adoration, speaking aloud truths about God.
C amid Transparency: Then I pause, confessing lies I’ve believed or wrong ways I’ve reacted—usually things still fresh in my mind.
T through reflection: I list blessings: family, Scripture, answered prayers, fresh starts.
S with bold faith: Finally, I ask for wisdom, peace, or breakthrough. Then I intercede for my community, our church, and world.
Every time, I feel anchored. I’ve seen anxiety dissipate, relationships deepen, clarity emerge. It’s not because the formula is magic—it’s because I now pray as a whole person, not a fragmented one.
Practical Tips to Adopt A.C.T.S. Prayer
If you’re ready to adopt ACTS, here are some practical tips:
Tip
Description
Use a Journal or App
Write or type each section—keep it simple or detailed based on your time.
Start with worship lyrics, confess with Psalm 51, or request via Philippians 4:6.
Pray with Others
ACTS works well in group prayer—worship together, confess, thank, and lift needs.
Be Flexible
Adapt the style—use ACTS as a guideline, not a rule—especially when the Holy Spirit leads.
Potential Objections and Clarifications
Objection 1: “This feels formulaic.” Good! Human minds need structure. ACTS simply gives order—but the content, emotion, and sincerity are all yours.
Objection 2: “I don’t have time.” Even a 5-minute ACTS prayer can be powerful. Worshipers linger longer, but it works at any pace.
Objection 3: “I prefer spontaneous prayer.” Structure doesn’t exclude spontaneity. Use ACTS as a pattern, and when the Holy Spirit moves you beyond one section, flow with Him.
The Ripple Effect—Why It Matters
When we pray with balance, we:
Grow spiritually—our faith becomes centered, not cyclical.
Build emotional resilience—confession and thanksgiving soothe the soul.
Experience relational depth—honest prayer fosters trust with God and others.
Become contagious spiritually—your example invites others to deeper prayer.
A.C.T.S. prayer isn’t private; it impacts families, communities, churches, and nations.
Challenge: Try A.C.T.S. for 21 Days
Here’s your invitation:
Write out or use an app for each section daily.
Reflect: How is your heart different on day 7? Day 14? Day 21?
Share your experience—comment on the blog, your church, your group.
Let’s do this together.
Conclusion: A.C.T.S.—A Ladder to Divine Connection
Structure isn’t the enemy of intimacy—it can pave the way for it. The A.C.T.S. method provides a scaffold: worship that uplifts, confession that cleanses, thanksgiving that warms, and supplication that releases dependence.
I’ve experienced deeper clarity, greater peace, and more meaningful encounters with God through ACTS. Jesus taught us to pray intimately—giving us the Lord’s Prayer as an example. ACTS simply builds on that, giving us a way to say what He taught us to pray.
So if you’re longing for a more balanced, heartfelt prayer life, give A.C.T.S. a try. Let structure guide—not restrict—you. And prepare for your relationship with God to grow deeper than ever.
There’s a moment during Episode 109 of my podcast—“Humble Yourselves”—when I paused, my voice steady but my heart thundering. I said it plainly, maybe even boldly: “God is not looking for your greatness—He’s asking for your submission.” That truth hit me harder than I expected. It wasn’t just something I said—it was something I was living.
If I’ve learned anything on this journey, it’s this: humility is not weakness. It’s strength. It’s discipline. It’s the gateway to everything God wants to do through you. I’ve seen firsthand how pride can delay destiny, how ego can cloud divine assignments, and how trying to do life on our terms leads to spiritual burnout. But I’ve also seen what happens when we choose to bow low—how God lifts us up.
This blog isn’t a lecture. It’s a testimony. A personal reflection. An invitation to join me on a deeper walk of surrender. Because in humbling yourself, you don’t lose identity—you gain authority. You don’t give up power—you receive divine alignment. And most of all, you open yourself to let God do what only He can.
What True Humility Looks Like
Let’s clear something up right now: humility isn’t self-hatred or pretending you’re less than who God made you to be. It’s not shrinking back. It’s not living under shame or minimizing your purpose. That’s false humility—and it’s just another form of pride dressed in insecurity.
True humility, as I’ve come to understand, is powerful. It’s an accurate view of yourself in light of who God is. It’s acknowledging that every gift you have—every opportunity, every success—isn’t a result of your doing alone. It’s being willing to say, “God, I don’t want to go anywhere or do anything if You’re not in it.”
C.S. Lewis once said, “Humility is not thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less.” That landed hard with me. Because I realized that so much of what we do—even “good” things—can be rooted in our need to be seen or validated. Humility takes the spotlight off us and puts it back on Him.
It means living with open hands and an open heart. It means being teachable. Being correctable. And yes—it means admitting when you’re wrong. But more than anything, it means yielding your will to God’s.
Humility Is Our Greatest Strength
You want to know the real flex? Surrender. Because humility unlocks strength you didn’t know you had.
When I operate out of humility, I have access to wisdom beyond my experience. I stop reacting out of emotion and start moving with intention. I don’t need to prove myself—I just need to obey. And in that obedience, power flows. Peace flows. Purpose gets clearer. And doors that I couldn’t open in my own strength? They swing wide, all because I got out of the way.
Humility doesn’t make you invisible. It makes you available.
And trust me—God does His best work through those who are available. That’s why the humble rise. That’s why they’re elevated. That’s why Jesus said, “Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 18:4).
Humility strengthens our relationships. It silences our need to always be right. It fuels unity and dissolves conflict. In ministry, in business, in family—where humility leads, grace follows.
Christ: The Blueprint of Humility
Nowhere is humility more vividly displayed than in Jesus Himself.
Philippians 2:5–8 tells us that Christ, though He was God, “did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped.” Instead, He emptied Himself. Took on the form of a servant. Became obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross.
That’s divine humility. The Son of God stooped down, washed dirty feet, and let Himself be crucified by the very people He came to save.
Jesus didn’t have to prove who He was. He knew who He was. That’s why He could kneel and serve. That’s why He could keep silent in front of His accusers. His power came from surrender.
If the One who holds the universe in His hands could choose humility—what excuse do we have?
Why Full Submission to God Changes Everything
Here’s where it gets personal.
Humbling myself wasn’t easy. It meant letting go of control. It meant silencing my plans and listening—really listening—for His voice. It meant repentance. It meant forgiveness. It meant trusting that God’s timing was better than mine.
But it changed everything.
Full submission isn’t passive. It’s fierce. It’s active. It’s saying: “Lord, take my ideas, my goals, my fears, my pride. I trust You more than I trust myself.”
And when you submit like that, you make room for the Holy Spirit to flow. You stop striving. You start hearing. You begin to operate in divine rhythm.
In my life, submission has brought clarity where there was confusion, peace where there was chaos, and purpose where there was wandering. And it’s not because I figured it out. It’s because I finally got low enough for God to lift me.
How to Walk in Humility Daily
Humility isn’t a one-time decision. It’s a daily discipline. Here’s what I’ve learned:
Start your day surrendered. Before you scroll, before you speak—ask God: “Lead me today. Keep me humble. Correct me quickly.” That posture sets the tone.
Ask for feedback. It takes humility to let people speak truth into your life. But those conversations? They’re gold. Don’t run from correction—run to it.
Serve when it’s inconvenient. Humility doesn’t wait for applause. It serves in silence. In secret. And that’s where growth happens.
Own your mistakes. Pride deflects. Humility owns. Say “I was wrong.” Say “I’m sorry.” Watch healing follow.
Celebrate others. A humble heart is secure enough to cheer others on. No comparison. Just joy.
Humility Impacts Everything
When you choose humility, you shift atmospheres.
Your relationships change. Your leadership changes. Your inner world transforms. Pride builds walls—but humility builds bridges. And in those bridges, God moves.
People aren’t drawn to perfection. They’re drawn to authenticity. To gentleness. To leaders and friends who walk low and lift others up.
And the best part? God honors it. He promises in James 4:10, “Humble yourselves before the Lord, and He will lift you up.”
I’ve seen it. I’m living it.
Conclusion: A Call to Bow Low So God Can Lift High
Let me leave you with this: Don’t be afraid to humble yourself.
It’s not the end of your influence—it’s the beginning of your impact. It’s not about thinking less of yourself—it’s about thinking more of God.
If Episode 109 taught me anything, it’s that God is still looking for vessels—not performers. He’s looking for people who will say, “Not my will, but Yours.” People who will go low so that He can go high. People who will carry His heart and not just His name.
So here’s my challenge to you this week: Pick one area where pride is hiding. Surrender it. Serve in secret. Apologize first. Let go of the need to be right. And ask the Holy Spirit to help you live humbled, not humiliated—surrendered, not silenced.
In a world as loud, fast, and emotionally charged as the one we’re living in today, knowing the difference between what feels right and what actually is right has never been more critical. If you’ve ever found yourself saying, “I wish I had more clarity,” you’re not alone. I’ve been there—too many times to count.
Over the years, I’ve come to realize that what I was really asking for wasn’t more information… it was discernment. The ability to see beneath the surface. To separate noise from truth. To know the voice of God in a world that’s constantly shouting.
In Episode 107 of my podcast, I shared some thoughts on this spiritual gift and why it’s essential—not just for preachers or leaders, but for every single one of us trying to live intentionally and righteously in a confusing world. This blog post is an extension of that message—deeper, more personal, and absolutely necessary.
What Is Discernment?
Discernment isn’t about being judgmental. It’s not about labeling things as “bad” or “good” just to feel in control. At its core, discernment is a spiritual sensitivity—a God-given gift that allows us to perceive what’s really going on beneath the surface.
It’s the wisdom to sense the true nature of people, situations, or decisions when they aren’t obvious. It’s knowing when to speak and when to stay silent. It’s recognizing divine opportunities—and demonic distractions.
Discernment goes beyond common sense and intelligence. You can be educated and still deceived. You can be successful and still walk blindly into the wrong room. But with discernment, you begin to walk in step with the Spirit. You don’t just move—you move with purpose, on divine timing.
It’s the difference between surviving life and navigating life spiritually and strategically.
King Solomon’s Request: A Discerning Heart
Let’s go back to one of the most profound stories in Scripture—1 Kings 3. Solomon, newly crowned as king, is given a divine invitation: “Ask for whatever you want me to give you.”
If there was ever a blank check moment in the Bible, this was it. He could’ve asked for wealth. He could’ve asked for military power, long life, or the destruction of his enemies. But instead, Solomon asked God for one thing:
“So give your servant a discerning heart to govern your people and to distinguish between right and wrong.” (1 Kings 3:9, NIV)
A discerning heart. That was it.
And God was pleased.
Because Solomon’s request wasn’t self-serving—it was spiritual. He wanted to lead well. To make decisions not based on instinct, popularity, or ego—but based on righteousness and justice. And God responded by not only granting that request but adding wealth, honor, and peace as a bonus.
Why? Because when we ask for what’s close to God’s heart, He entrusts us with more than we imagined.
Why Solomon’s Example Still Speaks Today
What Solomon asked for thousands of years ago is exactly what we need today—perhaps more than ever.
We’re living in a time of blurred lines. Right and wrong are often redefined by trends, feelings, or groupthink. Leadership is often based on charisma rather than character. And personal decisions—about relationships, careers, money, or even faith—can easily be made through the lens of pressure instead of purpose.
That’s why Solomon’s example is more than just a wise king’s prayer—it’s a blueprint for how to thrive in today’s chaos.
When you ask God for discernment, you’re not just asking to make good choices. You’re asking to live with clarity in a world of confusion. To respond, not react. To evaluate, not just absorb. To live from your spirit, not just your senses.
That’s powerful. And that’s rare.
The World Is Loud — Discernment Helps You Hear God
Let’s be real: we’re bombarded with messages every second. Social media, news, entertainment, opinions from people we admire and people we don’t even know. Everything is urgent. Everything is loud.
But not everything is truth.
The enemy doesn’t always come in the form of open rebellion. Sometimes, he disguises deception in what sounds “positive,” “affirming,” or “wise in your own eyes.” That’s why spiritual discernment is a must. Without it, we confuse convenience for calling, or emotion for anointing.
Discernment helps you filter what’s from God, what’s from your flesh, and what’s a distraction in disguise.
In my life, I’ve noticed that when I neglect discernment, I end up busy but ineffective. I start running fast—but in the wrong direction. But when I take time to pause, pray, and discern, I move slower—but with so much more power and peace.
It’s not about hearing more voices—it’s about hearing His.
Discernment in Daily Life
You don’t need to be a pastor or prophet to need discernment. You need it in everyday life.
When you’re making a decision about a relationship—God, give me discernment. When you’re offered a job that looks good on paper but doesn’t sit right in your spirit—God, give me discernment. When you’re raising your children and trying to protect their innocence while guiding them in truth—God, give me discernment.
Discernment shows up in the small moments: a hesitation before saying “yes.” A pause before firing back a text. A peace that floods you even when the circumstances say “panic.”
It’s a muscle. The more you use it, the more sensitive it becomes. And with every small act of obedience, you sharpen your ability to sense God’s leading.
Discernment vs. Judgment
Let’s clear something up: discernment is not the same as judgmentalism.
A lot of people get uncomfortable with the word discernment because they associate it with being harsh, critical, or self-righteous. But that’s not what true, Spirit-led discernment looks like.
Discernment is about seeing clearly—not condemning. It’s about understanding the deeper truth behind a person, a situation, or an opportunity—not assigning worth or shame to it.
Jesus made this distinction in John 7:24:
“Stop judging by mere appearances, but instead judge correctly.”
He wasn’t saying don’t judge at all—He was saying judge righteously. Use discernment. Don’t take things at face value. Don’t be fooled by polish or appearances.
The Pharisees judged by religion. Jesus discerned by the Spirit.
And we’re called to do the same. Not to tear others down, but to protect what’s holy. To guard our hearts. To live wisely. And to navigate a world that constantly wants us to confuse good with godly.
How to Cultivate Discernment
The beautiful thing about discernment is that it’s not reserved for a select few. It’s a gift, but also a skill—and we can all grow in it.
Here’s how I’ve learned to cultivate it:
Prayer – Start here. Ask God for it, just like Solomon did. James 1:5 tells us that if we lack wisdom, we can ask—and God will give generously.
Scripture – The Word is the ultimate filter. The more you know God’s truth, the easier it is to detect lies. Discernment without the Word is just intuition.
Quiet Time – You can’t hear God clearly if your mind is always filled with noise. Create space. Be still. Let the Spirit speak.
Wise Counsel – Surround yourself with people who live wisely. Who don’t just tell you what you want to hear but will tell you what you need to hear.
Obedience – The more you obey God’s promptings, the more sensitive you become to His voice. Disobedience dulls discernment. Faithfulness sharpens it.
Cultivating discernment is a lifelong process, but every step you take toward clarity is a step away from confusion.
The Fruit of Discernment
When discernment becomes part of your life, you start to notice the fruit.
Clarity in the midst of chaos
Peace in decisions that once felt overwhelming
Protection from traps that used to trip you up
Purpose where there used to be indecision
Confidence because you know you’re walking in alignment with God’s will
I can’t tell you how many times discernment has saved me—from relationships I should’ve avoided, opportunities that weren’t what they seemed, and paths that would’ve taken me far from my calling.
It’s not about being perfect. It’s about being positioned—in step with the Spirit, guided by truth, and anchored in God’s wisdom.
Biblical Examples Beyond Solomon
Solomon may be the most well-known example, but he wasn’t the only person in Scripture who operated with discernment. In fact, the Bible is full of people who leaned into this gift and saw God move powerfully as a result.
Take Joseph, for instance. In Genesis 41, Pharaoh has a dream no one can interpret. But Joseph, empowered by divine discernment, not only interprets it—but offers a strategy to save Egypt from famine. His discernment didn’t just change his life—it saved a nation.
Or consider Paul, who had to discern between true believers and false teachers. He constantly warned the early church not to be deceived by fine-sounding arguments, but to stay grounded in truth (Colossians 2:4–8). Paul’s discernment helped keep the gospel pure.
And of course, there’s Jesus, who discerned not just actions, but the intentions and thoughts of people’s hearts. Over and over again, Scripture says, “Knowing their thoughts…” Jesus responded in truth and grace—not reacting to the surface, but engaging with what was really going on underneath.
These weren’t random spiritual moments—they were rooted in deep relationship with God. And they show us that discernment isn’t just useful—it’s transformational.
My Personal Journey with Discernment
I’ll never forget a specific moment when discernment changed the entire trajectory of my life.
There was an opportunity presented to me—on paper, it looked perfect. The right pay. The right connections. The right timing. Everyone around me said, “This is a no-brainer.”
But something in my spirit wasn’t at peace. I prayed, and instead of excitement, I felt a quiet resistance. That’s the best way I can describe it—a pause in my soul.
So I said no.
Not long after, the full picture came to light. That opportunity would have pulled me away from my purpose. It was a good thing—but not a God thing. And that decision—rooted not in fear, but in discernment—saved me from months, maybe years, of distraction.
That experience taught me that discernment doesn’t always make sense to others. But when you trust the Holy Spirit more than human validation, you find peace even in the “no’s.”
Discerning the Spiritual Climate
We can’t talk about discernment today without talking about the spiritual climate we live in.
Culture is moving fast—and not always in the direction of truth. What was once considered biblical is now called bigotry. What was once sacred is now mocked. And what once convicted us now gets explained away.
This is not a time to be spiritually numb. This is a time for discernment.
We need believers who don’t just go with the flow, but stand firm in the faith. We need parents who can discern what’s being taught to their kids. Leaders who can discern between ambition and assignment. Churches that can discern between emotional hype and genuine Holy Spirit power.
Discernment doesn’t just protect you—it protects your family, your community, and your calling.
The Danger of Living Without Discernment
When we ignore discernment, we leave ourselves vulnerable to deception.
I’ve learned this the hard way. Without discernment, we end up:
Making decisions based on emotion instead of truth
Falling for flattery instead of integrity
Trusting appearances instead of character
Running after opportunities God never intended us to chase
And the results? Regret. Wasted time. Broken relationships. Burnout. Disillusionment with people—and sometimes even with God.
But it wasn’t God who led us there. It was our decision to move without pausing to pray.
That’s the danger of living without discernment. It’s not always obvious in the moment—but eventually, it always costs us something. And in some cases, it costs us everything.
That’s why we need to treat discernment not as a bonus—but as a non-negotiable in our spiritual walk.
The Role of Discernment in Leadership
If you’re in any form of leadership—ministry, business, parenting, coaching—discernment is your greatest asset.
You’re not just managing tasks. You’re stewarding people, culture, and vision. And with that comes the need to:
Discern people’s motives—not just their words
Discern timing—when to act, when to wait
Discern seasons—what God is doing now, not just what worked yesterday
Leadership isn’t just about making decisions. It’s about making the right decisions, at the right time, for the right reasons. And that requires spiritual sensitivity.
I’ve learned that leadership discernment is more caught than taught. It’s developed through experience, refined through mistakes, and deepened through prayer. But once you have it—it’s like having a spiritual compass. Even when the map isn’t clear, you can still head in the right direction.
Encouragement for Those Still Growing in Discernment
If you’re reading this and thinking, “I’m not there yet,” I want to encourage you: you don’t have to be perfect to grow in discernment.
God is not hiding wisdom from you. In fact, James 1:5 says:
“If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given to him.”
That’s a promise.
Start asking. Start listening. Start journaling what you sense. Start paying attention to peace—or the lack of it. Every time you obey the nudge of the Holy Spirit, you sharpen your discernment just a little more.
It’s not about hearing an audible voice. It’s about knowing His voice—that still, small whisper that always points to peace, truth, and righteousness.
And when you miss it (because we all do)? Learn from it. Don’t condemn yourself. God is committed to growing you. He’s not looking for perfect decision-makers—He’s looking for sensitive and surrendered hearts.
Conclusion: A Heart That Hears
Discernment is more than a spiritual accessory. It’s a spiritual necessity.
Solomon didn’t ask for riches, strength, or fame. He asked for a discerning heart—because he knew that everything else flowed from the ability to know and do what is right.
And if there was ever a time when we needed more believers with discerning hearts, it’s right now.
You don’t have to live confused. You don’t have to stay stuck. You don’t have to be swayed by every opinion, trend, or emotion. You can live with clarity, conviction, and confidence.
But it starts by asking.
So today, my challenge to you is simple:
Ask God for what Solomon asked for. A heart that hears. A spirit that sees. A life that discerns.
Call to Action
Reflect: Where in your life are you relying on logic or emotion more than discernment?
Pray: Ask God, right now, for a heart like Solomon’s—a heart that discerns what is right and pleasing to Him.
Journal: Look back on moments in your life where discernment saved you—or where lack of it cost you. What patterns do you see?
I’ll be honest—comfort used to be my goal. I thought if I could just find enough stability, success, and ease, I’d finally arrive at peace. But I’ve come to realize something radical: comfort doesn’t create peace—it creates complacency. And complacency is the enemy of purpose.
In Episode 106 of the 3 Pillars Podcast, I unpacked this truth: the life you were created for will demand discomfort. Growth doesn’t happen in the safe zone. It happens in the stretch zone. And if you want to live with meaning, faith, and fire, you have to embrace the process of being uncomfortable—again and again.
This post is about that process. About how I’ve learned (and continue learning) to lean into what stretches me instead of running from it. About how discomfort, rather than being something to avoid, is actually a gift from God—a tool He uses to shape, strengthen, and launch us.
If you’ve been stuck in a rut, coasting through life, or quietly avoiding the hard things—you’re not alone. But you don’t have to stay there. Let’s talk about how to break out of the comfort zone and start truly living.
The Comfort Zone: A Trap in Disguise
We love the comfort zone because it’s familiar. It’s predictable. We know the rules. We feel safe. And that’s the problem.
The comfort zone isn’t a sanctuary—it’s a trap. It keeps us small while convincing us we’re safe. It whispers, “Don’t try. Don’t risk. Don’t stretch. Just stay right here.” But staying still too long becomes its own kind of danger. That “safe space” becomes a cage.
When we live too long in the comfort zone, we stop challenging ourselves. We stop growing. We get spiritually sluggish, mentally dull, and emotionally numb. And slowly, without even realizing it, we start settling for survival instead of pushing toward significance.
Here’s what I’ve learned: growth and comfort cannot coexist. One will always cost the other.
The Science of Growth and Discomfort
This isn’t just spiritual talk—it’s biological fact. Your brain is designed to grow through challenge. It’s called neuroplasticity—the ability of your brain to rewire itself through effort, struggle, and learning.
When you lift weights, your muscles don’t grow because of comfort—they grow because of resistance. When you study something new, you feel mentally stretched—but that’s your brain expanding its capacity. Discomfort signals that adaptation is happening.
The same goes for your emotional and spiritual life. Facing fears, navigating conflict, tackling a new challenge—these experiences stretch you. And while they’re uncomfortable in the moment, they create resilience, confidence, and capacity you didn’t have before.
That’s why you can’t wait to “feel ready” before stepping out. You become ready by stepping out. Discomfort is the curriculum for growth—and we all have to enroll.
Faith and Discomfort: A Biblical Perspective
Let’s talk about faith for a minute. Because if you read the Bible—really read it—you’ll notice a pattern: God’s people are always being called out of their comfort zones.
Abraham was told to leave his home and everything familiar. Moses was called to confront Pharaoh and lead a nation through the wilderness. Esther had to risk her life to save her people. And Jesus? He left the glory of heaven to walk among us, suffer, and die for our redemption.
There’s no version of living by faith that doesn’t involve discomfort.
James 1:2–4 reminds us, “Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.”
God doesn’t call us to comfort. He calls us to maturity. And maturity happens through stretching.
If your faith has felt stale, dry, or uninspired lately, ask yourself: When was the last time I did something uncomfortable for God? If you’re not willing to step out in obedience when it’s hard, you’ll miss out on the growth and glory He’s trying to birth in your life.
My Personal Journey Into Discomfort
Let me tell you a story—one that changed me.
Years ago, I felt called to take a bold step in a direction that terrified me. It was completely outside my comfort zone—new people, new skills, new expectations. I didn’t feel ready. I didn’t feel qualified. But I felt convicted.
I wrestled. I delayed. I made excuses. But deep down, I knew: this wasn’t about my feelings. It was about my faith.
So I said yes. And stepping into that space felt like jumping into deep water without knowing how to swim. I was awkward. I was scared. I messed up. But I learned. I grew. I discovered strength I didn’t know I had—and more importantly, I discovered a deeper dependence on God.
Now, looking back, that moment became a pivot point. The fear didn’t disappear, but it no longer controlled me. Discomfort became familiar—not because it got easier, but because I got stronger.
Discomfort Builds Resilience
Here’s what no one tells you: the more you choose discomfort, the more resilient you become.
Think of it like emotional callusing. Just like your hands toughen after lifting weights, your heart and mind grow stronger every time you face what’s hard instead of running from it.
I’ve learned that discomfort doesn’t just toughen you up—it clarifies what matters. When you walk through something difficult, you stop sweating the small stuff. You stop procrastinating. You start acting with urgency and intentionality. Because you’ve been through something—and it changed you.
Resilience isn’t about pretending things don’t hurt. It’s about knowing you’re not defined by the pain. It’s about showing up even when it’s hard. And every time you do, you prove to yourself that you are not fragile—you are forged.
Breaking the Cycle of Complacency
Complacency doesn’t always look like laziness. Sometimes it shows up as routine. As busyness. As productivity that lacks purpose. I know—I’ve been there.
You wake up, go through the motions, stay in your lane, check the boxes… but deep down, you’re unfulfilled. Why? Because your soul was never designed to be satisfied by easy. It was built for mission. For momentum. For meaning.
The truth is, we can get really good at surviving our lives—and still miss the point of living them.
If you feel stuck, uninspired, or emotionally flat, it might not be because something is wrong. It might be because nothing is challenging you.
Breaking out of that cycle starts with awareness. Ask yourself:
When was the last time I did something new? When was the last time I failed at something because I tried something hard? What goals have I buried because they scare me?
Then, do something small—but bold. Shake up your routine. Choose the thing you usually avoid. Because that’s where the growth lives.
Daily Habits to Embrace Discomfort
You don’t need a dramatic leap to start stretching yourself. In fact, the real power lies in small, daily acts of discomfort. Here are a few I practice regularly:
Cold showers: It’s simple, but it teaches your body and mind to lean into discomfort on purpose. Difficult conversations: Don’t wait. Address what’s awkward. Say what needs to be said with humility and courage. Waking up early: Start your day by doing something hard—it shifts your whole mindset. Intentional silence: Sit without distractions. Listen to your thoughts. It’s uncomfortable, but deeply revealing.
These aren’t random challenges. They are disciplines. And discipline, as Scripture says, produces righteousness and peace (Hebrews 12:11). The more I practice discomfort daily, the more prepared I am to handle the bigger challenges when they come.
Discomfort in Relationships and Leadership
Let’s talk about people. Relationships can be some of the most uncomfortable areas in life—but also the most rewarding. Whether it’s friendships, marriage, parenting, or leadership, growth happens when we’re willing to be honest, humble, and vulnerable.
Leadership especially demands discomfort. You’ll have to make decisions people don’t like. You’ll have to say things that might offend. You’ll have to admit when you’re wrong. But here’s the thing—true leadership requires courage, not comfort.
And in close relationships, choosing discomfort means telling the truth, setting boundaries, and sometimes having painful conversations in the name of love and respect. That’s not easy. But the alternative—resentment, dishonesty, disconnection—is far more painful in the long run.
I’ve found that every time I lean into relational discomfort, I gain something: clarity, trust, connection, or freedom. And the relationships that matter most are the ones that survive those refining fires.
The Mindset Shift: Challenge = Opportunity
One of the most important shifts I’ve made in life is learning to see challenges not as threats, but as invitations. When something feels hard, scary, or uncertain, I try to pause and ask, “What is this trying to teach me?”
You see, fear is often a sign you’re standing on the edge of something meaningful. It’s a signal—not to run, but to pay attention. To lean in.
We have a saying in the leadership world: “Run toward the roar.” The idea comes from how lions hunt. The oldest lion—the one with the loudest roar but no teeth—stands on one side of the field and roars while the other lions wait on the other side. The prey, hearing the roar, runs away—right into the trap.
The safest direction? Toward the roar.
That story changed how I see discomfort. When something feels intimidating or uncertain, it might be God’s way of saying, “This is where I’m growing you.” The discomfort isn’t there to destroy you. It’s there to develop you.
Lessons from Episode 106
In Episode 106 of the 3 Pillars Podcast, I talked about how discomfort has been a powerful force in my own life—and how embracing it has led to everything I value: growth, faith, discipline, and purpose.
I shared how so many of us stay stuck because we confuse comfort with peace. But real peace—the kind that surpasses understanding—often comes after the obedience, not before.
Some of my favorite moments from the episode included:
Discomfort as divine preparation. How pain, when properly framed, produces perseverance. Why faith without risk is really just religion.
We weren’t created to live lukewarm lives. We were made to live with fire in our bones. And that fire is often lit in the furnace of discomfort.
Thriving Through Discomfort
This isn’t about gritting your teeth and surviving. It’s about learning to thrive in spaces where your old self would have quit.
When I look back on the most defining seasons of my life, they were all marked by some level of discomfort—moving to a new city, starting a business, confronting my own weaknesses, walking through uncertainty with nothing but faith.
And yet, those seasons didn’t destroy me. They rebuilt me.
I became more focused, more resilient, more prayerful. I found purpose in places I never would’ve gone if I had stayed comfortable. And I’ve seen that pattern repeated in the lives of people I respect most. The high performers. The deeply faithful. The purpose-driven. They all have this in common: they stopped chasing easy.
They leaned into challenge. And they came out stronger.
Encouragement for the Reluctant
If this message makes you a little uncomfortable—good. That’s the beginning.
Discomfort has a way of exposing what we’ve been avoiding. Maybe it’s a difficult decision. Maybe it’s a dream you’ve delayed. Maybe it’s a conversation you’ve been dreading or a risk you’ve been talking yourself out of for years.
If that’s you, let me encourage you with this: God doesn’t wait for you to be fearless—He invites you to be faithful.
Fear isn’t your enemy. Avoidance is.
You don’t need to be superhuman to break out of your comfort zone. You just need to be willing. Willing to show up afraid. Willing to be stretched. Willing to trust that who you’ll become is worth the discomfort it takes to get there.
You’re more capable than you think. And more than that—you’re called. Called to grow. To lead. To step into the version of yourself that you were created to become. But you won’t get there by staying comfortable.
Conclusion: The Gift of Discomfort
I used to pray for comfort. Now I thank God for discomfort.
Why? Because every great thing in my life was born through it. Growth. Faith. Purpose. Discipline. Leadership. None of it came from playing it safe. All of it came from leaning into the stretch.
Discomfort is not the enemy—it’s a gift. A guide. A tool in the hands of a loving God who sees more in you than you see in yourself.
So if you’re reading this today, I want to leave you with a challenge:
Stop asking for the path of least resistance. Start asking for the path of deepest growth.
That’s where your power is.
That’s where your calling is.
That’s where your future is waiting.
And it starts not someday, but today—with one brave, uncomfortable step.
Call to Action
Here are three things you can do today to start breaking out of your comfort zone:
Reflect and Journal: What areas of your life feel stagnant? What dream or decision have you been avoiding because it feels uncomfortable? Do One Hard Thing: Choose one thing that makes you stretch—big or small—and do it today. Don’t wait for motivation. Move with discipline. Share Your Journey: Tell someone what you’re working on. Invite accountability. Discomfort is easier to face when you don’t face it alone.
There was a time when I thought counseling was only for people who had hit rock bottom—those battling clinical depression, addiction, or trauma. I figured that as long as I could function, smile, and carry out my responsibilities, I didn’t need help. But deep inside, I knew there were parts of me that needed healing—emotions I hadn’t fully processed, beliefs I hadn’t questioned, and patterns I kept repeating. It wasn’t until I finally sat down with a professional and began to open up that I realized something powerful: counseling isn’t just for survival. It’s for growth.
In Episode 104 of the 3 Pillars Podcast, I shared my honest take on why mental health counseling is one of the most courageous and transformative choices you can make—not just when you’re struggling, but when you’re striving to become your best self. Today, I want to take that message deeper.
This post is for the strong person who carries a lot but rarely puts it down. It’s for the high achiever who feels like counseling is for “other people.” It’s for the faithful servant who prays often but still feels emotionally stuck. If you’ve ever wondered whether counseling could help you, I want you to know—it absolutely can.
Counseling Is Not Just for Crisis
Let’s get this out of the way first: you don’t need to be in crisis to go to counseling.
Yes, therapy can be a lifeline during trauma, loss, or emotional breakdowns. But that’s not all it’s for. Counseling is also a place for reflection, intentionality, and growth. It’s a space to ask questions like:
Who am I, really?
What emotional patterns do I keep repeating?
How can I communicate better in my relationships?
What beliefs are holding me back from living fully?
You don’t wait until your car breaks down to change the oil. You don’t wait for a heart attack to start exercising. So why should mental health be any different?
Counseling isn’t just triage. It’s training. It’s coaching. It’s emotional and spiritual hygiene. And just like going to the gym, the more you engage, the stronger you become—not just in your mind, but in your soul.
The Mental Health Parallel to Physical Wellness
Imagine if we treated physical health the way we treat mental health. “Oh, you’re going to the doctor? What’s wrong with you?” Or: “You don’t need a gym—you should be able to fix that yourself.” Sounds ridiculous, right? Yet we often bring that mindset into our emotional and psychological world.
Mental fitness is just as real as physical fitness. You don’t train your mind only when it’s weak—you train it so it can endure, expand, and thrive. Counseling is a place where you exercise your emotional muscles, challenge limiting beliefs, and gain tools to navigate life with clarity and peace.
I’ve had sessions where I didn’t cry, vent, or unravel. Instead, I explored. I learned. I discovered new ways to think, love, and lead. And I left those sessions stronger, clearer, and more grounded than ever.
Counseling as a Catalyst for Personal Growth
One of the most beautiful surprises I found in counseling is how much it helped me grow—not just emotionally, but mentally, relationally, and spiritually. Counseling didn’t just help me manage stress or sadness; it helped me see myself more clearly.
When I sat across from a counselor, I began to notice patterns in how I think, speak, and react. I saw how unresolved disappointments from the past still influenced my present. I discovered narratives I had picked up somewhere along the way—stories that said I had to be strong, silent, or self-sufficient at all times. Some of those stories weren’t true. Some of them were keeping me stuck.
Counseling offered me a mirror. Not a distorted mirror of shame or judgment, but one that gently revealed what needed healing. And the more I leaned into that honesty, the more I grew. I found new ways to manage my energy, regulate my emotions, and align my daily actions with my deeper values.
This wasn’t about fixing something that was broken—it was about strengthening something I wanted to keep building: my character.
Overcoming the Fear of Vulnerability
Let me be real—opening up is not easy. The first time I sat down for a counseling session, I kept thinking, “What am I even going to say?” I was worried I’d be judged. I was afraid of getting emotional. I wasn’t even sure if I’d be taken seriously since I wasn’t in a “crisis.”
But here’s the truth: vulnerability is the gateway to freedom.
We spend so much of our lives performing—smiling, showing up, doing what’s expected. But behind all that, there’s a deeper story waiting to be acknowledged. When you enter a safe, non-judgmental counseling space, you get to take off the armor. You get to speak freely, think aloud, and explore emotions you didn’t even know were there.
And something powerful happens in that space. You realize you’re not weak for feeling. You realize you’re not crazy for caring. You realize you’re not alone.
I’ve come to believe that being vulnerable is not the opposite of strength—it’s the evidence of it. And the more we embrace that truth, the more we can grow.
Integrating Faith and Therapy
One of the questions I often get is, “Can Christians go to therapy?” My answer is simple: Absolutely—and I believe we should.
There’s a dangerous misconception out there that faith and therapy are mutually exclusive. That if you really trusted God, you wouldn’t need counseling. But that’s like saying if you really trusted God, you wouldn’t need a doctor.
God created us with minds, hearts, and bodies that are wonderfully complex. And just as we seek physical healing through medicine, we can seek emotional and psychological healing through counseling.
For me, faith and therapy have worked hand in hand. Counseling has helped me explore how my faith is lived out in real time—not just in theology, but in how I forgive, how I process fear, how I trust, and how I love others. It’s helped me see where my spiritual life and emotional life need alignment. And it’s reminded me that asking for help is not a betrayal of God—it’s often His provision.
Whether you pursue biblical counseling or clinical therapy rooted in values you trust, the important thing is this: You’re not choosing between Jesus and a therapist. You’re inviting both into your healing journey.
How Counseling Enhances Relationships
One of the greatest byproducts of healthy counseling is its ripple effect on our relationships. I didn’t go into therapy to “fix” my relationships—but I began noticing shifts almost immediately.
Why? Because when we heal, we relate differently.
Counseling helped me become more self-aware. I began to see how my tone, assumptions, and emotional triggers impacted the people around me. I learned that listening wasn’t just about being quiet—it was about being present. I realized that my tendency to avoid confrontation was actually a barrier to intimacy. And I learned how to set boundaries—not to push people away, but to protect the space where healthy love can thrive.
These were not just psychological tools—they were relational game-changers. I stopped reacting from woundedness and started responding from wisdom. I grew in empathy. I learned to validate others without needing to fix them. I learned to apologize from a place of humility, not defensiveness.
And I didn’t just love others better—I felt more loved myself. Because when you’re emotionally grounded and mentally clear, you can show up authentically. And authenticity is what real connection is built on.
Busting the Myths Around Counseling
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room: the myths we’ve believed about counseling. Some are cultural. Some are generational. Some are spiritual. But all of them are damaging. So let’s bring them into the light.
Myth #1: “Only weak people need counseling.” Truth: The strongest people I know are the ones who know when to ask for help.
Myth #2: “I should be able to handle this on my own.” Truth: God designed us for community. Healing often happens in relationship.
Myth #3: “I just need to pray more.” Truth: Prayer is powerful, but it doesn’t replace wise counsel—it partners with it. Proverbs 15:22 says, “Plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisers they succeed.”
Myth #4: “Therapy is only for trauma or mental illness.” Truth: Therapy is also for growth, clarity, peace, prevention, and potential.
I’ve had to confront these lies in myself. And once I let go of them, I experienced something beautiful: freedom. The freedom to be human, to need help, to grow, and to get better—not because I was failing, but because I was finally facing the parts of me I wanted to evolve.
What to Expect in a Counseling Session
If you’ve never been to counseling before, you might wonder, “What actually happens in a session?” Let me demystify it a little for you.
Most sessions are around 45 to 60 minutes. They’re confidential, judgment-free, and entirely focused on helping you explore, understand, and grow. It’s not about fixing you—it’s about empowering you.
Some sessions feel deep and emotional. Others feel practical and strategic. Sometimes you’ll talk through past experiences. Other times, you’ll focus on present challenges or future goals. Your counselor won’t give you all the answers—but they will ask you the questions that lead to the truth.
The most important part is the relationship. The trust. The rapport. The feeling that you can bring your full self into the room and not be shamed for it.
Finding the right counselor is like finding the right mentor or coach. It might take a session or two to feel comfortable—but once you do, you’ll wonder why you didn’t start sooner.
The Role of Accountability and Objectivity
One of the most valuable aspects of counseling is having someone outside your personal circle offer objective perspective and accountability. Unlike friends or family—who often carry their own biases, emotions, or history—your counselor is trained to hold up a mirror without judgment or agenda.
When I began counseling, I was amazed at how freeing it was to talk to someone who wasn’t there to fix me, agree with me, or protect my ego. They simply reflected the truth. Gently, yes—but firmly, when needed.
Accountability isn’t just about behavior; it’s about mindset. A good counselor can help you spot self-sabotage, blind spots, and emotional habits you didn’t even realize were operating in the background of your life. That insight? It’s priceless.
And because counseling is consistent, it builds momentum. You start connecting dots between past wounds and present reactions. You become more aware of your triggers. And over time, you start making better decisions—not just reactive ones.
This objective support keeps you grounded in truth, not just emotion. And that makes all the difference.
Mental Clarity = Greater Focus and Purpose
We live in a world of noise. Information overload. Emotional clutter. Inner monologues on repeat. And if we’re not intentional, all of that static can drown out the voice of purpose.
Counseling helped me clear the fog.
With each session, I began to sort out what was urgent versus what was important. I gained clarity on the goals that actually aligned with my values. I discovered where I was people-pleasing, procrastinating, or acting from fear—and I started realigning my actions with intentionality.
Mental clarity isn’t just about “feeling better”—it’s about functioning better. When your mind is clear, your work improves. Your relationships deepen. Your time becomes more fruitful. You’re no longer spinning your wheels in survival mode—you’re steering toward purpose.
I truly believe that when we’re mentally well, we’re more available for God’s calling on our lives. We stop being driven by wounds and start being led by wisdom.
Counseling as Preventative Care
We don’t wait until we’re physically collapsing to prioritize our health—we take vitamins, we eat well, we stretch. Why should emotional wellness be different?
Counseling is one of the most powerful forms of preventative care for your mind, your relationships, and your soul. It teaches you how to recognize the signs of burnout before you hit the wall. It equips you to navigate stress, grief, or life transitions with grace instead of chaos.
You don’t have to wait until something “goes wrong” to benefit from therapy. In fact, some of my most transformative breakthroughs came when things were going well. That’s the power of preventative insight—it strengthens the foundation so storms don’t shake you.
Just like we tune up our cars and recharge our batteries, counseling helps us sustain mental and spiritual energy. And that sustainability is what gives us long-term health—not just bursts of healing.
A Testimony of Transformation
I can say with full confidence that counseling changed me—but not in the way I expected. It didn’t just “fix” something. It transformed me.
I became more aware of how I show up in conversations. I started listening—not to respond, but to understand. I gained the courage to confront emotions I’d buried for years. I began making decisions not from fear or approval-seeking, but from wisdom and alignment with my values.
My faith also deepened. I realized that God wasn’t asking me to pretend I had it all together. He was inviting me to bring everything—mess and all—into the light. Through counseling, I began to experience what real grace looks like: truth spoken in love, growth without shame, and healing that doesn’t come from trying harder, but surrendering deeper.
It hasn’t been easy. Some sessions brought tears. Others brought frustration. But every time, I walked away more whole than I walked in. And that wholeness? It overflows into every area of my life—from my work to my relationships to my spiritual walk.
Counseling didn’t make me less of who I was. It helped me become more of who I was always meant to be.
Encouragement for the Reluctant
If you’ve read this far and you’re still unsure—maybe even a little nervous—I get it. Starting counseling can feel intimidating. Vulnerability takes courage. But let me encourage you with this:
You don’t have to have all the answers. You just have to take the first step.
You’re not weak for needing help. You’re wise for recognizing it.
God can—and often does—work through people. Through professionals. Through processes. Don’t let pride or fear rob you of the breakthrough that’s waiting on the other side of one brave conversation.
Start small. Reach out. Explore your options. You don’t have to commit forever. Just begin. Because the journey of healing and growth doesn’t start with having it all together—it starts with telling the truth.
You’re not alone. You’re not broken. And you’re absolutely not beyond help.
Conclusion: Give Yourself Permission to Grow
We invest in what we value—our homes, our careers, our bodies. But the most valuable investment you can make is in your inner world—your heart, your mind, your soul.
Healthy mental counseling is not a luxury or a last resort. It’s a tool for the emotionally intelligent, the spiritually hungry, and the personally driven. It’s for people who want to be free. Who want to be whole. Who want to live with intention.
So today, I invite you to give yourself permission to grow. Not because you’re failing—but because you’re finally ready to flourish.
You deserve that. And more importantly—your future deserves that version of you.
Call to Action
If this message spoke to you, here are three steps you can take today:
Reflect: Where in your life are you feeling stuck, unclear, or emotionally heavy? Journal it. Name it.
Explore: Research local or virtual counselors. Look for someone whose approach aligns with your values—whether clinical, faith-based, or integrative.
Talk: Reach out to a trusted friend, pastor, or mentor. Share your desire to grow and ask for prayer or guidance as you take the next step.
You were never meant to carry everything alone. Healing is available. Growth is possible. And the time to start is now.
There’s one sin I’ve wrestled with more than any other—not because it’s always obvious, but because it’s always lurking beneath the surface. It disguises itself as strength, confidence, and even righteousness. It’s the sin that turns victories into vanity, faith into arrogance, and leadership into domination.
I’m talking about pride.
In Episode 102 of the 3 Pillars Podcast, I unpacked what C.S. Lewis called “The Great Sin.” And let me tell you—it was one of the most personal and challenging topics I’ve ever covered. Not just because pride is dangerous, but because I’ve seen how deeply it infects even the best intentions. In this post, I want to dive deeper—sharing my own reflections, calling out the blind spots, and walking with you toward something better: humility.
Why Pride Is Called “The Great Sin”
C.S. Lewis didn’t call pride “The Great Sin” lightly. In Mere Christianity, he writes:
“The essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride. Unchastity, anger, greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere flea bites in comparison.”
Why? Because pride is the root of all other sin. It puts the self at the center, crowding out God, truth, and others. It’s the spiritual cancer that turns love into control, service into performance, and faith into superiority.
Pride whispers, “You deserve more,” “You know better,” and “You don’t need help.” It’s not just bad behavior—it’s rebellion at the deepest level.
The Invisible Poison
The dangerous thing about pride is that it’s invisible—at least to ourselves. We can spot it in others from a mile away, but in the mirror? Not so much.
I’ve had moments where I thought I was pursuing excellence, but I was really chasing applause. Times I believed I was leading out of conviction, when in reality, I just didn’t want to be questioned. That’s how pride works. It wears the costume of virtue—success, strength, intelligence—but it poisons everything from the inside.
There’s a fine line between confidence and arrogance. One lifts others up. The other keeps others down so you can stand taller.
Pride as Opposition to God
James 4:6 says, “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.” Let that sink in: God actively resists the proud.
Pride puts us in direct opposition to God because it dethrones Him. It says, “I’ve got this. I don’t need help. I don’t need grace.” It kills prayer, because why pray if you think you’re in control? It kills worship, because you’re too focused on yourself. It kills surrender, because surrender requires trust—and pride only trusts itself.
The more I tried to control outcomes, micromanage my life, and perform for God, the more exhausted and empty I became. Pride builds towers. God builds altars. And He only meets us at one of those.
Pride in Comparison
Lewis also said, “Pride gets no pleasure out of having something, only out of having more of it than the next man.” That hit me hard. Because pride feeds off comparison.
It’s not enough to be successful—you have to be more successful than someone else. Not just wise—wiser. Not just holy—holier. It’s a zero-sum game where someone always has to lose so you can win.
But that mindset is a prison. It steals joy, kills gratitude, and fosters envy. I’ve caught myself measuring my worth by likes, influence, or income. And every time, it left me more anxious, more insecure, and more disconnected.
Pride and Isolation
The loneliest people I’ve ever met are the proudest. Because pride isolates.
When you believe you’re always right, no one can correct you. When you’re always performing, no one really knows you. When you’re addicted to being admired, you stop letting yourself be loved.
I’ve had to learn the hard way that the cost of pride isn’t just personal—it’s relational. Real intimacy—whether with God, friends, or a spouse—requires humility. It requires saying, “I don’t know,” “I need help,” and “I’m sorry.”
Humility as the Antidote
So what’s the antidote? Humility.
Not weakness. Not insecurity. True humility. Which isn’t thinking less of yourself—it’s thinking of yourself less.
Jesus modeled this perfectly. Philippians 2:5–8 says He “made Himself nothing… and humbled Himself by becoming obedient to death—even death on a cross.” The King of Kings washed feet, embraced lepers, and died for enemies. That’s humility. And that’s strength.
The more I choose humility, the more peace I find. No need to prove anything. No need to be the best. Just walking in grace.
Recognizing Pride in Yourself
How do you know if pride is running your life?
Here are some red flags I’ve had to wrestle with:
Getting defensive when corrected Always needing to have the last word Feeling threatened by others’ success Struggling to celebrate others Wanting recognition for every good deed Thinking “I deserve more”
A good gut-check is to ask: “Who gets the credit when I succeed?” If the answer isn’t God, you might be exalting the wrong person.
Practical Strategies to Overcome Pride
Overcoming pride isn’t about a one-time decision. It’s daily warfare. But here are some tools that have helped me:
Gratitude: Thank God and others daily. It shifts focus from entitlement to appreciation. Service: Do things no one sees. Clean the bathroom. Serve a stranger. It purifies your motives. Accountability: Invite people to speak into your blind spots. Pride hates correction—but humility welcomes it. Prayer: Ask God to humble you before He has to. A teachable spirit invites His grace.
Pride in the Church and Faith Community
Pride doesn’t just live in the world—it lives in the church. It hides in theological debates, ministry competition, and spiritual elitism.
Romans 12:3 reminds us, “Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought.” Yet how often do we measure faith by knowledge, gifting, or visibility?
The goal of our faith isn’t to be right—it’s to be righteous. And righteousness isn’t earned—it’s received.
We need to trade prideful performance for Spirit-led presence. To seek unity over ego. To remember we’re all beggars pointing to the same Bread.
Pride and Performance
For years, I lived on the treadmill of performance—especially in my spiritual life. I thought if I prayed more, achieved more, or looked holier, I’d be closer to God.
But that mindset only fed my pride and deepened my exhaustion. Pride says, “Earn your worth.” Grace says, “You already have it.”
Now, I live for an audience of One. And when I mess up, I repent—not perform. When I succeed, I give credit—not take it.
Pride in Relationships
Pride kills relationships. It refuses to apologize, refuses to forgive, and refuses to listen. It clings to being right, even when it costs everything.
I’ve seen this play out in my own life—marriages strained, friendships broken, all because someone (often me) couldn’t say, “I was wrong.”
Humility opens the door to healing. It says, “I value the relationship more than being right.” And in that space, love can grow.
What Freedom from Pride Feels Like
Let me tell you: there’s nothing like walking free from pride.
When I started letting pride die, I found peace. I found clarity. I found God again—not as a concept I mastered, but a Savior I desperately needed.
I stopped needing applause. I stopped fearing failure. I started walking in grace.
It’s not perfect—I still battle pride every day. But now I’m aware. Now I fight. Now I choose the lower seat and let God lift me up.
A Daily Choice: Humble Yourself
Luke 14:11 says, “All those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.” The choice is ours.
Pride doesn’t die once. It dies daily.
Each day, I have to crucify my ego. Each day, I have to surrender the throne. And each day, God meets me in that place with grace and peace.
Conclusion: Choose the Lower Seat
Pride leads to destruction. Humility leads to freedom. It’s that simple—and that difficult.
But the good news? You don’t have to do it alone. God gives grace to the humble. And He’s ready to meet you in your surrender.
So today, I challenge you: Choose the lower seat. Let go of ego. Embrace humility. And walk in the joy and freedom of grace.
Call to Action
Journal: Where does pride show up in your thoughts, words, or relationships? Pray: “Lord, expose the pride in me and replace it with humility.” Practice: Do one act this week that no one sees and that benefits someone else.
Let’s walk this path together—lower, freer, and full of grace.