"I wanted you to see what real courage is, it's when you know you're licked before you begin, but you begin anyway and see it through no matter what." - Harper Lee
1 CHRONICLES 28-29
JOHN 11:47-57
JOURNAL
As I read through the account of David preparing Solomon to build the Temple, what stood out to me was the incredible level of detail God provided. Nothing was left to chance. The design, the materials, the furnishings, the responsibilities, even the placement of objects within the Temple were carefully laid out. David's final charge to Solomon was not simply to build a structure but to recognize the sacredness of the task before him. "Be strong and do the work." The Temple mattered because it represented the dwelling place of God among His people, and because of that, every detail was worthy of attention, care, and devotion.
What strikes me is how differently I often think about myself. Jesus tells us that the Temple of God is no longer a building made with human hands but that His Spirit dwells within us. When I place those two ideas side by side, I begin to see something I have missed for much of my life. If God cared that deeply about the construction and care of a physical temple, how much more does He care about the condition of the living temple He has entrusted to me? My mind, my body, my heart, and my spirit are not incidental. They are gifts from God and they deserve to be tended with the same intentionality that David and Solomon gave to the Temple.
Too often I find myself focused on what I can accomplish for others while neglecting the care of my own soul. I want to lead well, love my family well, encourage others, teach students, write meaningful words, and make a difference. Yet the reality is that if I cannot steward what God has placed within me, how can I faithfully steward what He has placed around me? If I am unwilling to care for my own heart with grace, compassion, truth, and obedience, then my ability to truly love others will always be limited. If I cannot extend patience to myself, I will struggle to extend patience to others. If I cannot accept God's love for me in my weakness, I will struggle to offer that same love to those around me.
I think for much of my life I have viewed self-care, rest, gratitude, and even self-compassion as somehow selfish. Yet when viewed through the lens of the Temple, they become acts of stewardship. Taking care of my body, guarding my thoughts, feeding my spirit, pursuing truth, resting when needed, and receiving God's grace are not indulgences. They are responsibilities. They are part of tending the sacred ground God has entrusted to me.
Harper Lee wrote that real courage is knowing you're licked before you begin but beginning anyway and seeing it through no matter what. Maybe courage is not always found in dramatic moments. Maybe courage is found in the daily decision to tend the Temple. To choose gratitude over comparison. To choose truth over self-protection. To choose obedience over comfort. To choose faith when fear seems more reasonable. David's words still echo through the centuries: "Be strong and do the work." Today that work may not involve building walls of stone, but it does involve caring for the life God has placed within me. And if I can learn to steward that gift well, perhaps I will be better prepared to love and serve the people He has placed around me.
MATTHEW 28:8-20