“Do one thing every day that scares you.”
~ Elinor Roosevelt
JOSHUA 16-18
8When Simon Peter saw this, he fell at Jesus’ knees and said, “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!” 9For he and all his companions were astonished at the catch of fish they had taken, 10and so were James and John, the sons of Zebedee, Simon’s partners.
Then Jesus said to Simon, “Don’t be afraid; from now on you will fish for people.” 11So they pulled their boats up on shore, left everything and followed him.
JOURNAL
God’s command is clear throughout Scripture. It is to go and to act. From the Israelites stepping into land already promised to them, to Peter dropping his nets and following Jesus, the pattern is the same. Faith is not passive. It is expressed through movement. Peter encounters the power of Jesus and his immediate response is shame and fear. He sees who Jesus is and, in contrast, feels the weight of who he is not. Yet Jesus meets that moment directly and tells him not to be afraid, then calls him forward into purpose.
Yesterday on the golf course I saw something in myself that connects deeply to this. It was almost startling how quickly my mind moved. One bad shot and my thoughts immediately jumped ahead. I began projecting failure into the next swing, the next hole, even the rest of the round. It was not logical. It was automatic. It was as if my mind was trying to protect me by predicting more disappointment before it could happen.
Even when I hit a good shot, there was still tension. Instead of simply receiving it, my mind questioned it. Can I do that again? Was that a fluke? The projection did not stop, it just shifted forms. Whether negative or positive, it was still rooted in doubt and control.
What struck me most is that this was happening in a place where everything was good. I was outside, enjoying the game, with nothing truly at stake. Yet my mind still searched for ways to protect itself through fear and shame. That realization was revealing. These responses are not situational. They are deeply wired. They come from that primitive part of the brain designed for survival. But when left unchecked, those same instincts do not protect me, they sabotage me. They pull me out of the present moment and rob me of both joy and effectiveness.
So during the round I tried something different. Instead of projecting forward, I focused only on the shot in front of me. I approached each one with the intention of making it the best shot of my life. I chose to be composed, focused, and confident. Not because I knew the outcome, but because I could fully give myself to that moment.
The difference was immediate. The game became more enjoyable. There was a freedom in it. I was no longer playing against imagined futures. I was simply present.
This ties directly to what I see in Scripture today. Peter did not have time to project every possible outcome of leaving his nets. He was confronted with a moment. A choice. Stay in what he understood or step into something unknown. Jesus did not remove the uncertainty. He simply said do not be afraid and follow me.
God does not ask me to control outcomes. He asks for obedience in the present moment. He asks me to give my best right now and trust Him with everything else. As simple as that sounds, my mind constantly tries to complicate it by projecting into the future or replaying the past.
Fear and shame have been the two most consistent forces I have battled in life. They are powerful because they feel protective, but in reality they keep me from stepping fully into what I am called to do. The command to not fear is repeated over and over, not because fear will not come, but because it must not be allowed to lead.
The answer is not avoidance or suppression. It is obedience. It is choosing to move forward anyway. It is trusting that God meets me in each step, not in the imagined outcomes my mind creates.
There is a discipline to this. My mind will drift. My emotions will rise. There will be moments where everything in me wants to retreat or control. But those moments are opportunities. They are invitations to return to faith, to return to the present, and to act.
Even when walking through darkness, the promise remains the same. God is with me. My responsibility is not to map the entire path, but to take the next step with courage, focus, and trust.
Psalm 23:4