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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Is Busyness Keeping You from Knowing God?

Happiness is found in getting to know God more every day. 

Paul said in Philippians 3:10, “I want to know Christ and experience the mighty power that raised him from the dead. I want to suffer with him, sharing in his death” (NLT).

Another translation says that Paul became “thoroughly acquainted” (AMP) with God because he had a relationship with him and took the time to get to know him. He understood the difference between knowing about someone and actually knowing someone—and Paul wanted to really know Christ.  

You don’t become thoroughly acquainted with God by accident. You don’t just wake up and accidentally fall into a relationship with Jesus. Paul says it’s a determined purpose. It’s something you have to do something about. You have to invest your time in it. You have to invest your heart in it. You have to invest your resources and your energy. Getting to know God requires the best of everything you have!

One trap that can keep you from getting to know God better is busyness. Just like busyness can destroy your relationships, it can also destroy your relationship with God.

Psalm 46:10 says, “Be still, and know that I am God” (NIV).

To grow in your relationship with God, you need to make time for him and be still. Just a few minutes of focused time every day can make all the difference in the world. I’m not saying you have to spend an hour in prayer every day. You can start with 10 or 15 minutes each morning, reading the Bible and talking with God.

The most important thing is to make it a habit and commit to getting to know God. Only then will you, like Paul, begin understanding the wonders of God with greater clarity.

Make this your daily prayer: “Lord, if I don’t do anything else today, I want to get to know you a little bit better and I want to love you a little bit more.” As you pray and live this out, you’ll begin to experience greater happiness in your life.

In Summary:

In this passage, the focus is on the intentional pursuit of deep intimacy with God as the true source of lasting happiness, using the Apostle Paul’s radical commitment in Philippians 3:10 as a road map. The text draws a sharp distinction between merely knowing about God and being "thoroughly acquainted" with Him, emphasizing that a vibrant spiritual life never happens by accident. The primary obstacle identified is the trap of daily busyness, which erodes relationships both human and divine. By contrasting this frantic pace with the command in Psalm 46:10 to "be still," the text argues that cultivating a resilient relationship with God requires a disciplined, daily investment of time, heart, and energy, starting with small but consistent habits.

Bottom Line:

True fulfillment and spiritual power are found not in the frantic pace of busyness, but in the disciplined, daily choice to pause and intentionally cultivate a deep relationship with God.

Next Step:

To align my daily execution with my higher identity, commit to a "Quiet 15" protocol this week: block out the first 15 minutes of my morning for uninterrupted scripture reading and prayer before checking notifications or engaging with my task list. This sustainable micro-habit protects my energy, counters the trap of reactive busyness, and ensures my daily momentum is anchored in purposeful stillness rather than accidental drift.



Monday, June 15, 2026

Guarding the Mind with Gratitude

In Philippians 4:6-7 you’ll find one of the most difficult teachings to obey in the entire Bible: “Don’t worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need, and thank him for all he has done. Then you will experience God’s peace” (NLT).

It’s not easy to stop worrying about the often-scary, everyday parts of life, but God tells me how. He says I should pray about everything and thank him for all he has done. Grateful prayer brings peace. God says that when I start to worry, I should pray.

Parents understand the power of grateful prayers. Most parents wouldn’t appreciate their children always making requests and never saying “thank you” for the things they’ve received.

God sees it the same way. He is waiting for me to ask him for what I need and want. More than 20 times in the New Testament, I'm told to “ask” him. But he wants me to ask with gratefulness.

The Bible urges me to be specific in my requests—and in my praises. Instead of a simple “thank you for everything,” God wants me to tell him what I'm grateful for.

Something that can require an even bigger step of faith is when I thank God in advance. When I have the faith to thank God ahead of time—before I can see how he’s working—miracles happen. 

The more thankful I am, the easier it is to see God at work in my life. The Bible says that God inhabits the praise of his people. He uses my thanksgiving as an instrument of power in my life.

So, take a moment now, and tell God what I'm grateful for. Then keep going, moment by moment, practicing gratitude for who God is, what he has done, and all that I believe he will do.

In Summary:

In Philippians 4:6-7, the Apostle Paul delivers a radical command to exchange anxiety for a specific framework of prayer rooted in gratitude. Writing from a Roman prison cell—a place of severe personal restriction and uncertainty—Paul demonstrates that peace is not the absence of trouble, but the presence of God calibrated through intentional focus. The text emphasizes that worrying is a passive reaction to life's pressures, whereas specific, thankful prayer is an active, disciplined choice. By explicitly naming our needs and deliberately cataloging God's past faithfulness, I can shift my perspective from our problems to His sovereignty, which ultimately unlocks a supernatural peace that guards my mind.

Bottom Line:

Anxiety loses its grip when we intentionally trade vague worries for specific, gratitude-fueled prayers.

Next Step:

Establish a "Gratitude First" protocol for my daily planning. Before diving into my task list, project deadlines, or areas of current pressure, write down three highly specific things I am grateful for from the last 24 hours, and three things I am thanking God for in advance regarding my upcoming decisions. This disciplined action shifts my identity from a stressed problem-solver relying on my own strength to a steward operating from a position of secure, grounded peace.


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Summary of what I learned this week - 6/8/26

Learning from this week:


Summary

Relying purely on grit and willpower to navigate life and leadership inevitably leads to exhaustion, internal friction, and stagnation. True breakthrough requires a shift toward identity-based leadership, where individuals stop trying to "lone-ranger" their outcomes and instead anchor their minds in divine energy (energos). By aligning one's daily posture with God's will rather than anxiety and self-reliance, the heavy mental grind begins to disappear, making room for sustainable growth and a disciplined mind that actively rejects fear.

This internal alignment naturally transforms how we interact with the world, moving us away from isolation and toward meaningful collaboration and radical gratitude. True relational happiness is a learned skill developed by intentionally practicing cooperation and consideration within our communities. Furthermore, adopting a habit of "radical gratitude"—giving thanks in all circumstances—anchors us in God’s sovereignty and serves as a powerful catalyst for deepening connections, restoring intimacy, and strengthening personal and professional bonds.

Key Points

  • Willpower Alone is Unsustainable: Leading purely through raw self-reliance and grit creates psychological friction and exhaustion; sustainable growth requires transitioning to identity-based leadership anchored in divine energy (energos).

  • Collaboration Cultivates Happiness: Relational joy is a learned skill built on active cooperation and deep consideration for others, moving individuals away from a "lone-ranger" mindset and into supportive community frameworks.

  • Radical Gratitude Heals and Connects: Expressing daily, intentional thankfulness in all circumstances protects against apathy, restores intimacy in relationships, and shifts one's focus from fear to confidence.

 

Friday, June 12, 2026

This Is God’s Will: Give Thanks

“Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” 1 Thessalonians 5:18 (NIV)

In many cultures around the world, people set aside certain days or seasons for giving thanks.  But God wants you to be intentional about your thankfulness every day. He wants you to develop this spiritual habit, one that is reflected in the life of a faithful follower of Jesus. Because the closer you get to Jesus, the more deeply you understand God’s love, and the more grateful you’re going to be.

What does it mean to be radically grateful?

The Bible says in 1 Thessalonians 5:18, “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (NIV). In every circumstance give thanks—that’s radical gratitude.

How can I be thankful even in difficult circumstances? I can thank God in every circumstance because he is in control. He can bring good out of evil. He can turn around the worst mistakes I’ve made. No matter what happens, God isn’t going to stop loving me.

I can find a hundred things to be thankful for in any circumstance, even when the circumstance stinks.

Radical gratitude—being thankful in all circumstances—is God’s will because it creates fellowship. What is meant by that? Gratitude always builds deeper relationships between myself and other people and between myself and God.

If I want to get closer to someone, start expressing gratitude to that person. Maybe I'm feeling distant from my  spouse. I've lost that spark because I stopped doing the things that created the spark early on—and now I take her for granted. Start doing what I did when we were dating: Express gratitude. Write little notes of kindness and encouragement. Call or text during the day, just to tell your spouse that I'm thankful for her.

Do I want to build better connection in my small group? Don’t just go to my gathering. During the week, contact the people in my group. Say, “I’m grateful for you, and here’s why.” I'll find that the more grateful I am for my group, the more my group will bond—and the more I’ll grow in radical gratitude.

Let us “enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise; give thanks to him and praise his name. For the LORD is good and his love endures forever; his faithfulness continues through all generations” (Psalm 100:4-5 NIV).

In Summary:

This text unpacks the concept of "radical gratitude" based on 1 Thessalonians 5:18, emphasizing that thankfulness is an everyday spiritual habit rather than a seasonal obligation. Practicing radical gratitude requires giving thanks in all circumstances—not necessarily for the difficult situation itself, but in it, anchoring one's perspective in God's sovereignty, enduring love, and ability to redeem any situation. Furthermore, the passage highlights gratitude as a powerful relational catalyst; actively expressing appreciation to God and others dismantles apathy, restores intimacy in marriages, strengthens community bonds within small groups, and ultimately fosters sustainable spiritual growth.

Bottom Line:

Radical gratitude is a daily, intentional discipline that anchors me in God's unchanging goodness and actively builds deeper connections with the people around us.

Next Step:

Commit to a disciplined action of daily appreciation to combat taking my closest relationships for granted. For the next seven days, select one specific person each day—such as my spouse, a family member, or a small group peer—and send them a direct, intentional text or note expressing one precise reason I am grateful for who they are or what they do.


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Two Ways to Practice Collaboration

Happiness isn’t a matter of luck. It’s a matter of learning! To live a happier life, I need to learn how to work well with others. 

This is the skill of collaboration. It’s an important skill not often taught in schools; but when learned, it can exponentially increase a person’s happiness.

What do I need to learn in order to work well with other people?

First, learn to cooperate with others. In the Bible, the church in Philippi sent a man named Epaphroditus to help Paul while he was in prison in Rome. Philippians 2:25 says, “I feel that I must send Epaphroditus—my brother, coworker, and fellow soldier—back to you. You sent him as your personal representative to help me in my need” (GW).

By calling Epaphroditus his brother, coworker, and fellow soldier, Paul was using three relational metaphors that represent teamwork. Life together is a family, a fellowship, and a fight. Epaphroditus didn’t shut himself off from the world and become a lone ranger. He chose to be a team member in these three ways.

As a believer, I'm in the same fight together against Satan, so I need to cooperate with one other—no matter how different we are. The best place to learn how to do that is in the church.

Second, learn to be considerate. Paul mentioned Epaphroditus again in Philippians 2:26: “He has been longing to see all of you and is troubled because you heard that he was sick” (GW).

Notice how Paul used two examples of consideration: Paul was considerate of his coworker’s homesickness, and Epaphroditus was considerate about the Philippians’ concern.

When I learn to be considerate of other people’s needs, fears, and doubts, I’ll be a happier person. For instance, if I'm considerate of my spouse, I'll a have a happy marriage. But if I'm not thoughtful with my words and actions, I’ll have an unhappy marriage.

The Bible says in The Message paraphrase, You must get along with each other. You must learn to be considerate of one another, cultivating a life in common” (1 Corinthians 1:10).

Cultivating a life with a common goal of Christlikeness takes work. Like a garden that requires cultivation to bear fruit, I'll see how my effort bears the fruit of happiness and strong relationships.

In Summary:

This text emphasizes that true happiness is not accidental but learned, specifically through the essential skill of collaboration. Drawing from Paul’s relationship with Epaphroditus in Philippians 2 and Paul's exhortation to the Corinthians, the passage highlights two critical components of working well with others: cooperation and consideration. By viewing community as a family, fellowship, and shared spiritual fight, individuals are encouraged to move away from isolation and actively cultivate deep, empathetic relationships. Ultimately, investing effort into understanding others' needs and aligning around shared goals bears the direct fruit of sustainable relational health and personal joy.

Bottom Line:

Relational happiness is a learned skill developed by intentionally choosing cooperation over isolation and consideration over self-interest.

Next Step:

Identify one current professional or personal partnership where I have recently felt friction or a tendency to "lone-ranger" the outcome. Shift my identity from an isolated operator to a collaborative builder by scheduling a brief alignment conversation with that person this week; focus entirely on practicing active consideration by asking about their current challenges, needs, or doubts before pushing my own agenda forward.


Monday, June 8, 2026

God Is with You—Don’t Be Afraid!

No matter what I'm going to face today, this week, or next year, I won’t face it alone. God is with me, he’s working in me, and he is for me. 

Philippians 2:13 says, “God is working in you, giving you the desire and the power to do what pleases him” (NLT).

God is working in me. The word “working” in Greek is the word energos, from which we get our word “energy.” God is the energy driver in your life. I'm not just going on willpower. I'm not just going on my own power. God says he will give me the power I need, no matter what I'm facing.

Not only is he working in me, but he is also with me. The Bible says, “I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. . . . On that day you will realize that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you” (John 14:18, 20 NIV).

That’s quite a promise! The Bible says that Christ is in me, that I've sheltered with him, and that I'm sealed with the Holy Spirit. That means that, for the devil to get to me, he’s got to get through the Trinity. That’s pretty good protection and a great relief from fear.

Not only is God with me and in me, but God is also for me. Psalm 23:6 says, “Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life” (ESV).

When a shepherd leads the sheep, guard dogs are always at the back, keeping watch and making sure the sheep move in the right direction. The Bible says that the guard dogs in my life are God’s goodness and mercy.

God’s goodness and mercy are always at work in my life. God gives me the things I don’t deserve—that’s his goodness. And he doesn’t give me the punishment I deserve for my sins—that’s his mercy.

His goodness includes the blessings I experience now but also the gift of my salvation: “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9 NIV).

God is watching over my life! I ought to get up every morning and say with confidence, “God, thank you that you’re going to be with me today, you’re going to be working in me today, and you’re going to be for me today.”

That’s good news! It helps me let go of fear about what I'm facing, replacing it with happiness.

In Summary:

This study today delivers a powerful reminder of God's active, three-fold presence in a believer's life: He is working in me, He is with me, and He is for me. By breaking down Philippians 2:13, John 14:18-20, and Psalm 23:6, the passage demonstrates that I do not have to rely on mere willpower or navigate life's challenges isolated and afraid. Instead, God acts as my constant source of divine energy (energos), provides absolute spiritual protection through the Trinity, and pursues me daily with His "guard dogs" of goodness and mercy. Ultimately, anchoring my mind in these truths shifts my daily posture from anxiety and fear to confidence and sustainable joy.

Bottom Line:

Because God is simultaneously working within me, standing with me, and operating for me, I can abandon the exhaustion of self-reliance and face any circumstance with absolute confidence.

Next Step:

Attempt to commit to a "First-Five" identity alignment habit this week: Before looking at my phone or checking my to-do list in the morning, speak the declaration at the end of the text aloud: “God, thank you that you’re with me, working in me, and for me today.” Framing my morning around divine energy rather than self-generated willpower ensures sustainable growth, protects my peace, and builds a disciplined mind that rejects fear before the day even begins.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Beyond the Small Stuff: Cultivating Lasting Peace

Fretting and fighting over the small stuff will always cause me to lose my happiness.

This is a hard habit to break because people are negative by nature and conditioned by culture. Ever since Adam and Eve, we all have been going around excusing and accusing. We excuse ourselves for the mistakes we make, but accuse everybody else for them.

We tell ourselves things like, If I just had .... then I’d be happy. 

That is “when and then” thinking—when this happens, then I’ll be happy. But the truth is, I'm as happy as I choose to be! I can’t blame anybody else for my unhappiness because happiness is a choice. I have to stop excusing and accusing; I have to stop fretting and fighting over the small stuff.

The Bible says, “Do everything without grumbling or arguing, so that you may become blameless and pure” (Philippians 2:14-15 NIV).

This may one of the most difficult verses in the Bible. But the scariest verse is Matthew 12:36, where Jesus says, “And I tell you that on the Judgment Day people will be responsible for every careless thing they have said” (NCV).  

How many times have I complained, grumbled, or argued about something when in reality I shouldn’t have been sweating this small stuff? The first law of life is this: Don’t sweat the small stuff.  Law number two is this: It’s almost all small stuff!

The Bible says in 1 Thessalonians 5:18, “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (NIV).

Study after study has shown that gratitude is the healthiest attitude.

What do I have to be thankful for? Remember, no matter what is going on in my life, God is always with me, God is always in me, and God is always for me.

That’s cause for gratitude, not grumbling.

In Summary:

Todays review shows the destructive human tendency to forfeit personal happiness by obsessing over minor irritations, a habit rooted in a historical culture of making excuses and projecting blame onto others. It challenges the illusion of "when and then" thinking, emphasizing that true happiness is an immediate, internal choice rather than a byproduct of ideal circumstances. By contrasting the spiritual dangers of grumbling and careless speech—as warned in Philippians and Matthew—with the transformative command to maintain gratitude in all situations, the text reminds us that my perspective shifts entirely when I anchor myself in the truth that God is consistently present, internal, and supportive.

Bottom Line:

Happiness is a daily choice maintained through intentional gratitude and the refusal to let minor inconveniences dictate my peace.

Next Step:

To align my daily actions with a growth-oriented identity, implement a "Zero-Grumbling Audit" for the next seven days. Choose one specific, recurring daily trigger—such as my morning commute, a tedious administrative task, or an annoying digital interruption—and commit to replacing any internal or external complaint with an immediate, specific statement of gratitude. This disciplined shift from accusing to thanking breaks the conditioned habit of "sweating the small stuff" and builds a sustainable foundation for long-term emotional resilience.