2 John 1:8, do not lose what you have worked for, if deception is the weapon, then compromise is the trap, because most people don’t fall away from the faith all at once, it happens slowly, one small compromise at a time. Watch yourselves, pay attention, be alert, because no one is immune to falling away, no one is so strong in their faith that they can ignore the danger of spiritual drift. Matthew 24:13, 1 Corinthians 9:27, disqualified, if Paul, one of the greatest apostles, a man who encountered Jesus, planted churches and wrote most of the New Testament was concerned about being disqualified, how much more should we be on guard. But people don’t realize they are falling away until it’s too late, no one wakes up one day and decides I’m going to walk away from God today, instead it starts with small compromises.
You’re passionate about reading the Bible, but then life gets busy, you start skipping days here and there, a small compromise. Then you stop praying as often, because you’re tired, another compromise. Then you start watching or listening to things that you know aren’t good for your soul, but you tell yourself, it’s not that bad, another compromise. Then you start justifying sin, you start saying things, God understands, he knows my heart, another compromise and before you know it, the fire you once had is gone, the passion you once had for Jesus is replaced with apathy and the worst part, you don’t even remember when it happened. Watch yourselves, because the enemy doesn’t need to destroy you all at once, the enemy just needs to distract you long enough to make you drift.
That job that isn’t bad, but that makes it impossible for you to serve as God calls you. That relationship that isn’t sinful, but that keeps you spiritually lukewarm. That comfort that isn’t bad in itself, but that prevents you from taking risks for the Kingdom. If Jesus literally asked you to renounce everything and follow him without guarantees of comfort or success, would you do it, not in theory, not as the correct answer in a Bible study. In the concrete reality of your life, if Jesus told you to leave your career, to sell your house, to move to another country, to give up your retirement plans, to abandon everything you’ve built, would you do it, because that’s exactly what he asked the first disciples to do and they did it.
Peter left his fishing business, Matthew left his lucrative position as a tax collector, the others abandoned families, financial security, future plans and Jesus never promised them they would get those things back. Jesus never told people, follow me and later I’ll give you back double what you lost, he said the opposite. Matthew 10:34-39, Jesus explains exactly what it means to follow him, those are Jesus’ words, not from a modern theologian, not from an extremist interpretation, they’re the direct words of the one, the church says it worships and they’re completely opposite to the message preached every Sunday. The modern message says, Jesus will make your family happier, faith brings peace to your life, but Jesus says, I came to bring division, not peace, this message has been so diluted, it’s commercially unviable, you can’t build a religious empire on a message of total loss.
You can’t sell books promising that following Jesus might cost you everything or fill stadiums saying that real Christianity is a narrow path that few find and even fewer are willing to walk, so a more digestible version is invented, a version where Jesus improves your life, instead of ending it. Where the cross is an abstract symbol, instead of a daily reality, where sacrifice is optional, instead of essential. The diluted gospel, it doesn’t transform anyone, it produces religious consumers, not disciples. The diluted gospel produces people who go to church, but not people who live like Jesus, it produces Christians who sing about surrender, but don’t remotely know what it means to truly surrender. Psalm 23:2, he leads me beside still waters, still waters address our fears, but why still waters, because sheep, unlike many animals are terrified of rushing streams, their wool, a blessing when dry becomes a curse when soaked, if sheep fall into fast moving water, the weight drags them under and they drown.
So while rushing water may look refreshing to a sheep, it represents danger, that means something profound, not every opportunity is a blessing, not every open door is safe, not every path that sparkles leads to life. The shepherd knows what the sheep cannot see, that what looks exciting may be destructive, so he leads them to still waters, the waters that bring peace, not panic, it exposes a spiritual truth most believers never learn, God does not lead you by pressure, he leads you by peace. Your shepherd does not push you into turbulence, he guides you into clarity, if your soul feels like it’s drowning in noise, comparison opinions, anxiety, confusion, endless choices, God didn’t lead you there, the good shepherd never drives his sheep into chaos, he does not motivate with fear, he does not manipulate with urgency, he does not confuse with mixed signal, he leads calmly, consistently, confidently towards stillness.
The still waters David speaks of, are more than hydration, they are a test, can you follow God into peace, even when your flesh prefers motion, because some believers become addicted to activity, if life isn’t rushing, they assume something is wrong. But God’s leadership contradicts human instinct, he does not call you to survive rapids, he leads you beside waters that restore, not waters that overwhelm. So if your heart feels restless, if your mind refuses to quiet, if your emotions feel like a river in flood, stop, God may be saying, the noise is not from me, listen for stillness, my voice is in the peace, not the panic. Still waters don’t just refresh you, they reveal whether you trust the shepherd enough to slow down, can God lead you or can you follow him, when he leads you away from everything that makes noise.
You’re passionate about reading the Bible, but then life gets busy, you start skipping days here and there, a small compromise. Then you stop praying as often, because you’re tired, another compromise. Then you start watching or listening to things that you know aren’t good for your soul, but you tell yourself, it’s not that bad, another compromise. Then you start justifying sin, you start saying things, God understands, he knows my heart, another compromise and before you know it, the fire you once had is gone, the passion you once had for Jesus is replaced with apathy and the worst part, you don’t even remember when it happened. Watch yourselves, because the enemy doesn’t need to destroy you all at once, the enemy just needs to distract you long enough to make you drift.
That job that isn’t bad, but that makes it impossible for you to serve as God calls you. That relationship that isn’t sinful, but that keeps you spiritually lukewarm. That comfort that isn’t bad in itself, but that prevents you from taking risks for the Kingdom. If Jesus literally asked you to renounce everything and follow him without guarantees of comfort or success, would you do it, not in theory, not as the correct answer in a Bible study. In the concrete reality of your life, if Jesus told you to leave your career, to sell your house, to move to another country, to give up your retirement plans, to abandon everything you’ve built, would you do it, because that’s exactly what he asked the first disciples to do and they did it.
Peter left his fishing business, Matthew left his lucrative position as a tax collector, the others abandoned families, financial security, future plans and Jesus never promised them they would get those things back. Jesus never told people, follow me and later I’ll give you back double what you lost, he said the opposite. Matthew 10:34-39, Jesus explains exactly what it means to follow him, those are Jesus’ words, not from a modern theologian, not from an extremist interpretation, they’re the direct words of the one, the church says it worships and they’re completely opposite to the message preached every Sunday. The modern message says, Jesus will make your family happier, faith brings peace to your life, but Jesus says, I came to bring division, not peace, this message has been so diluted, it’s commercially unviable, you can’t build a religious empire on a message of total loss.
You can’t sell books promising that following Jesus might cost you everything or fill stadiums saying that real Christianity is a narrow path that few find and even fewer are willing to walk, so a more digestible version is invented, a version where Jesus improves your life, instead of ending it. Where the cross is an abstract symbol, instead of a daily reality, where sacrifice is optional, instead of essential. The diluted gospel, it doesn’t transform anyone, it produces religious consumers, not disciples. The diluted gospel produces people who go to church, but not people who live like Jesus, it produces Christians who sing about surrender, but don’t remotely know what it means to truly surrender. Psalm 23:2, he leads me beside still waters, still waters address our fears, but why still waters, because sheep, unlike many animals are terrified of rushing streams, their wool, a blessing when dry becomes a curse when soaked, if sheep fall into fast moving water, the weight drags them under and they drown.
So while rushing water may look refreshing to a sheep, it represents danger, that means something profound, not every opportunity is a blessing, not every open door is safe, not every path that sparkles leads to life. The shepherd knows what the sheep cannot see, that what looks exciting may be destructive, so he leads them to still waters, the waters that bring peace, not panic, it exposes a spiritual truth most believers never learn, God does not lead you by pressure, he leads you by peace. Your shepherd does not push you into turbulence, he guides you into clarity, if your soul feels like it’s drowning in noise, comparison opinions, anxiety, confusion, endless choices, God didn’t lead you there, the good shepherd never drives his sheep into chaos, he does not motivate with fear, he does not manipulate with urgency, he does not confuse with mixed signal, he leads calmly, consistently, confidently towards stillness.
The still waters David speaks of, are more than hydration, they are a test, can you follow God into peace, even when your flesh prefers motion, because some believers become addicted to activity, if life isn’t rushing, they assume something is wrong. But God’s leadership contradicts human instinct, he does not call you to survive rapids, he leads you beside waters that restore, not waters that overwhelm. So if your heart feels restless, if your mind refuses to quiet, if your emotions feel like a river in flood, stop, God may be saying, the noise is not from me, listen for stillness, my voice is in the peace, not the panic. Still waters don’t just refresh you, they reveal whether you trust the shepherd enough to slow down, can God lead you or can you follow him, when he leads you away from everything that makes noise.