“Those who have a 'why' to live, can bear with almost any 'how'.”
1 SAMUEL 1-3
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LUKE 11:33
“Those who have a 'why' to live, can bear with almost any 'how'.”
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Today feels different. Not because anything around me has changed, but because I am more aware that this day was never guaranteed. Today is my birthday, and that alone is enough to stop and recognize what an unbelievable gift it is simply to be alive. Another year was not owed to me, and yet here I am, breathing, thinking, feeling, remembering. Out of the thousands who did not wake up today, I did.
What overwhelms me even more is realizing that I did not arrive at this day on my own. My life is the result of countless people who have carried me, loved me, protected me, corrected me, encouraged me, and at times pushed me when I would not have moved forward on my own. Family who sacrificed. Friends who showed up. Coaches, mentors, teachers, even strangers who crossed my path at just the right moment. There were people who spoke truth into me when I was drifting, people who believed in me when I doubted myself, and people who challenged me when I needed it most. Every one of them is part of the reason I am here today.
And over all of it, I can see the hand of God. In the highs and the lows, in the moments of clarity and the seasons of confusion, He was present. The same God who raises up and humbles, who gives and takes away, who guards and guides. When I look back, I see protection I did not notice at the time, redirection I did not understand, and provision I certainly did not earn. It is humbling to realize how much has been held together for me.
Jesus’ words about not worrying land differently today. Life really is more than all the things I tend to chase or stress over. If God feeds the birds and clothes the fields, then how much more has He already taken care of me. I can see it now, not just in theory, but in the evidence of my own life. Every year, every season, every breath has been sustained by something far greater than my own strength.
There is also a deeper weight to this birthday. Not pressure, but purpose. If today is a gift, then it is not meant to be wasted. It is meant to be lived fully, honestly, and courageously. I have been given everything I need. The same Spirit that empowered men throughout Scripture lives in me. That means I am not lacking. I am not waiting on something else to begin. Today is the day I already have.
So today is not just about looking back with gratitude, though there is plenty of that. It is also about stepping forward with intention. To live in a way that honors the people who poured into me. To live in a way that reflects the God who sustained me. To love better, to give more freely, to act with courage, and to stop holding back out of fear or comfort.
I am grateful for every year, every lesson, every joy and every hardship that shaped me. All of it mattered. All of it was used. And somehow, by grace, I get another day.
Today, I do not want to hide the light I have been given. I want to live it openly. Not perfectly, but fully. Not for myself alone, but in a way that brings something good into the lives of others. Thank you, God, for this day. Thank you for my life. Thank you for every person who has been part of it. And thank you that the story is not finished yet.
“To believe in something, and not to live it, is dishonest.”
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In a world where saying the right thing has become easier than living it and where winning is often treated as the ultimate goal, integrity is constantly under pressure. When winning becomes the priority above all else, truth becomes negotiable and convictions begin to shift based on what produces the desired outcome. It becomes easy to justify small compromises, telling ourselves they are necessary, until eventually those compromises shape who we are. The tension is not just hypocrisy but fear. Fear that if we live fully aligned with truth and refuse to bend, we might lose something that feels important. Because of that fear, it is tempting to perform, to posture, or to say what sounds right while living differently behind the scenes.
Ruth offers a completely different picture. She had every reason to walk away and no one would have blamed her, yet she chose commitment over convenience and faithfulness over advantage. Her decision was not based on what she could gain but on what was right. In the same way, Jesus confronts those who had learned how to appear righteous while avoiding true obedience. They looked the part and were respected, but their lives did not reflect what they claimed to believe. He exposes the danger of living for appearance while neglecting the heart.
The real question comes down to what I am serving in moments of choice. God has given me the ability to think, choose, and act, and those decisions reveal what truly drives me. If my actions are rooted in a need to win, protect my image, or avoid discomfort, they will slowly pull me away from truth. If they are rooted in love and obedience to God, they will require courage and faith, and they may not always look like winning in the moment.
Looking back, I can see how often I chose the easier path because it felt safer. I avoided situations that required risk or exposure and allowed fear and doubt to influence my decisions. In those moments, I was not trusting God but placing my trust in outcomes. Scripture repeatedly shows people who chose faithfulness over comfort. David stepped forward in faith, Noah obeyed despite ridicule, Abraham left what was familiar, Joseph held onto his calling through hardship, Moses returned to face his past, Daniel stood firm under pressure, and Paul endured suffering to remain obedient. None of them were focused on winning in the world’s sense. They were focused on being faithful.
That is the tension I have to live in. I can pursue outcomes and risk compromising who I am, or I can pursue obedience and trust God with the results. Choosing to shrink back, stay silent, or take the convenient path is not humility. It is fear. If God has placed truth and conviction within me, then living it out fully is not optional. It is the very thing I am called to do.
“Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan Press On! has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race.”
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Judges is hard to read because it is chaotic, disturbing, and deeply unsettling. The violence and the decisions people make all point back to one simple truth that everyone did as they saw fit. When there is no anchor, no authority, no higher alignment, things unravel quickly. That is not just Israel’s story, it is mine too when I lose my center.
In Luke, Jesus says ask and it will be given, seek and you will find, knock and the door will be opened. It is a beautiful promise, but one that has often been misunderstood. When I tie that promise too tightly to specific outcomes, to answers happening on my timeline or looking the way I expect, I begin to distort it. I start measuring God’s faithfulness by whether things go my way, and that is where everything begins to break down.
When the outcome becomes everything, persistence starts to fade. If results do not come fast enough or do not look the way I hoped, discouragement creeps in. Faith begins to crack. I start questioning, doubting, and even resenting. Eventually I am tempted to quit and trade long term purpose for immediate relief. I cash in on something easier, something quicker, something that numbs the disappointment rather than walking through it.
But the promise was never about controlling the outcome. The real gift is the Holy Spirit, God’s presence within me, sustaining me regardless of the result. That changes everything because now persistence is not fueled by outcomes, it is fueled by presence. Faith is no longer dependent on circumstances but rooted in relationship. The goal is not simply to get through difficulty but to walk through it with endurance, trust, and a steady confidence that God is still at work even when nothing looks like it is changing.
Joseph’s story reminds me of this truth. He was betrayed, falsely accused, and thrown into prison, and every external outcome pointed to failure. Yet the Lord was with him. That was the constant. Not success as the world defines it, but presence. Over time that presence produced something deeper than immediate results ever could, including character, resilience, and ultimately redemption.
I see in my own life how easy it is to become outcome driven. It is easy to feel discouraged when things do not go as planned and to interpret delay as denial. But when I step back and really consider my life, I see how much I have been given and how often God’s grace has shown up in ways I did not recognize at the time. If I let outcomes dictate my faith, I will always be unstable and I will quit too early. But if I anchor myself in His presence and trust that what He is doing in me matters more than what is happening around me, then I can persist. I can keep showing up and pressing on, not because I know how things will turn out, but because I know who walks with me through it, and that is something no outcome can take away.
“God's definition of what matters is pretty straightforward. He measures our lives by how we love.”
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“Self-discipline is a form of freedom. Freedom from laziness and lethargy, freedom from expectations and demands of others, freedom from weakness and fear -- and doubt.”
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