Had an interesting conversation at work right after lunch. I'll sum it up the best I can and without profanity, lol 🤣🤣🤷🏾♂️
I was talking with two coworkers. One is a good dude, but life has hit him hard. The other is younger, confident, and still at that stage where he thinks he's got most things figured out. Somehow the conversation turned to church, and they started asking me questions.
One of them looked at me and said, "Man, I don't get you. You go to church every Sunday, you're quiet, stay out of drama, and you're cool with everybody. How does that work?"
The other jumped in and said, "And you always seem positive. Life ain't exactly easy. What's the secret?"
I told them I think a lot of it comes down to identity.
How we handle situations is based on who we believe we are. If I see myself as a victim, I'll react like one. If I define myself by my failures, I'll live defeated. But when I understand that my identity is in Christ, it changes how I respond to people, problems, and pressure.
One of them laughed and asked, "So church made you nice?"
I said, "No. God is teaching me how to be kind."
There's a difference.
A lot of people think kindness means weakness. It doesn't. Jesus was loving, but He wasn't a pushover. He forgave people, corrected people, and stood for truth. You can be kind without letting people walk over you.
I told them I try to live by a few simple principles: I don't lie. I do what I say I'm going to do. I put God first. Not because I'm perfect, but because character matters.
One of them asked, "What happens when people take advantage of that?"
I said, "Sometimes they do. But my character isn't based on their behavior. It's based on mine."
That got real quiet.
Then we started talking about relationships and boundaries. One of them said, "You're cool with everybody, but you don't seem close to everybody."
I laughed and said, "That's called boundaries."
Even Jesus had boundaries. He loved the crowds, poured into the disciples, and had an even smaller circle with Peter, James, and John. Everybody doesn't get the same level of access.
Then one of them asked, "Why do you pray so much if God already knows what you need?"
I told him, "If the weather forecast says it's going to rain, what do you bring?"
He said, "An umbrella."
I smiled and said, "Exactly. When you pray, carry an umbrella."
A lot of people pray but don't expect anything. Faith is believing God is able and living like you actually believe He heard you. Not demanding outcomes, but trusting Him enough to prepare for what He's doing.
Before we wrapped up, I shared something that's guided me for years:
Treat me like the friend you prayed for. Because if you treat me like I'm just anybody, eventually I'll treat you like everybody.
And one more thing:
To get a blessing, you have to be a blessing.
The Bible says in Luke 6:38, "Give, and it shall be given unto you." I've learned that some of God's greatest blessings show up when we're busy encouraging, helping, serving, and pouring into others.
By the end of the conversation, neither one of them had much to say.
Not because I won an argument.
But because sometimes the strongest testimony isn't preaching a sermon. Sometimes it's simply showing up, keeping your word, treating people right, walking humbly with God (Micah 6:8), and having a peace that doesn't make sense to people who don't know where it comes from.






































































