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Envoy Discipleship

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Followers of Christ fighting back against doom scrolling, bringing light and salt into the digital landscape. Covering the everyday muses necessary to build the Kingdom of God here on earth within our everyday lives. christfocused.substack.com

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episode Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 3: Band of Believers artwork

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 3: Band of Believers

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 3: Band of Believers Anchor Scripture “Two are better than one, because they have a good reward for their toil. For if they fall, one will lift up his fellow… And though a man might prevail against one who is alone, two will withstand him, a threefold cord is not quickly broken.”- Ecclesiastes 4:9–12 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ecclesiastes%204%3A9-12&version=ESV] ESV Band of Believers Two questions to kick us off and prime the conversation this week: Who are the believers helping sharpen your life right now? And who are you intentionally strengthening in return? One of the great lies of our modern culture is that maturity means independence. To need less. To rely less. To detach. To become self-sufficient. We live in a culture where individualism is King. But the Christian life, set apart from western culture, was never designed as an isolated pursuit. The Kingdom of God is deeply communal. From Genesis to Revelation, God forms a people, not just individuals. A family, not lone-wolf converts. A body, not separate spiritual consumers. Even Jesus, the perfect Son of God, gathered disciples around Him. He walked with them. Ate with them. Corrected them. Prayed with them. Sent them together. The New Testament assumes shared life. “Bear one another’s burdens.” - Galatians 6:2 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Galatians%206%3A2&version=ESV] “Confess your sins to one another.” - James 5:16 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James%205%3A16&version=ESV] “Encourage one another daily.” - Hebrews 3:13 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Hebrews%203%3A13&version=ESV] “Admonish one another.” - Romans 15:14 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Romans%2015%3A14&version=ESV] “Love one another.” - John 13:34 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John%2013%3A34&version=ESV] The repeated phrase throughout the New Testament is not just “believe”, but “one another”. Biblical friendship is not casual social overlap. It’s covenantal companionship in pursuit of Christ. In many ways, modern loneliness exists not because people lack interaction, but because they lack spiritual brotherhood and sisterhood and a good comprehension of what that means. We have followers without accountability. Connections without vulnerability. Entertainment without discipleship. Crowds without deep fellowship. But thankfully, scripture paints a very different picture of spiritual community. Acts 2 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202&version=ESV] describes believers who: devoted themselves to teaching - Acts 2:42–47 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A42%E2%80%9347&version=ESV] shared meals together - Acts 2:42–47 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A42%E2%80%9347&version=ESV] prayed together - Acts 2:42–47 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A42%E2%80%9347&version=ESV] carried one another’s burdens - Acts 2:45 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A45&version=ESV] worshiped together - Acts 2:44 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A44&version=ESV] shared resources - Acts 2:44 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A44&version=ESV] lived with glad and generous hearts - Acts 2:46 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%202%3A46&version=ESV] The early church was not built primarily around events. It was built around a shared life centered on Christ. Iron Sharpens Iron “Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another.” - Proverbs 27:17 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs%2027%3A17&version=ESV]ESV Sharpening is not always comfortable. True biblical friendship is not merely affirming. It is refining. A godly friend: encourages you toward holiness confronts compromise lovingly strengthens you in weakness reminds you of truth when emotions distort reality calls out hidden pride celebrates faithfulness over image helps carry burdens points you back to Christ repeatedly This is radically different from much of the modern friendship culture. Many relationships today are built around convenience, entertainment, networking, or personal benefit. Biblical friendship is rooted in sanctification. A true Christian brother or sister doesn’t simply help you feel supported. They help you become more like Jesus. That means there are moments where encouragement is needed. And moments where loving correction is needed. Hebrews warns us: “But exhort one another every day, as long as it is called ‘today,’ that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin.” - Hebrews 3:13 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Hebrews%203%3A13&version=ESV] ESV Notice the seriousness of this. Isolation often accelerates spiritual drift. Sin thrives in secrecy. Pride grows in isolation. Bitterness deepens in silence. Temptation will also strengthen where there isn’t any accountability. The enemy frequently attacks believers not first through open rebellion, but through gradual isolation. Disconnection. Withdrawal. General distance from biblical community. Because disconnected believers - become vulnerable believers. Jesus & Friendship I’ve personally heard Christians speak as though friendship is secondary to the interactions they are having within the body of Christ. But Jesus Himself demonstrates the depth and beauty of spiritual friendship for us clearly. “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you.” - John 15:13–15 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John%2015%3A13%E2%80%9315%20&version=ESV] ESV Jesus invited His disciples into closeness. Not just interaction and instruction. Not merely authority. Relationship. And within the disciples themselves, we even see layers of relational and situational closeness. Peter, James, and John walked with Jesus in moments others didn’t. The Garden of Gethsemane. The Mount of Transfiguration. Moments of deep grief and revelation. This doesn’t mean we should form cliques or exclusivity. It simply acknowledges a biblical reality: Depth requires intentionality. Not every relationship can or will carry equal depth. But every believer needs meaningful spiritual relationships. People who know: your struggles your blind spots your calling your weaknesses your patterns your burdens your spiritual condition Many people know our public image. The one they see on LinkedIn, Facebook or Instagram. Or the mask we put on every Sunday. Few know our actual soul. Friendship in an Exhausted Age Modern life often works against deep community. Schedules are overloaded. Phones fragment attention. People move cities and regions frequently. We become isolated nomads. Digital interaction replaces embodied presence. Even churches can, unfortunately, become highly attended - but relationally shallow. And we know from scripture that spiritual formation rarely happens at depth through occasional attendance alone. Discipleship requires proximity. Time. Shared rhythms. Consistency. This is why meals matter. Conversations matter. Serving together matters. Prayer together matters. Showing up repeatedly matters. Small, faithful rhythms build strong spiritual relationships over time. The church isn’t merely a weekly event to consume. It is a spiritual family to participate within. I’m not sorry if that challenges you, but I am glad that if it did, you are beginning to rethink where your priorities have been amidst your weekly schedule. Jonathan & David One of Scripture’s most profound examples of covenant friendship is found in Jonathan and David. “The soul of Jonathan was knit to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul.” - 1 Samuel 18:1 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Samuel%2018%3A1&version=ESV] ESV. Their friendship was built upon loyalty, sacrifice, and covenant faithfulness. Jonathan strengthened David when David was hunted. Protected him. Encouraged him. Remained faithful even when it cost him personally. True friendship often carries that same thread of sacrifice. Biblical friendship is not transactional. It is steadfast. It is covenantal. Shallow networking or situational relationships, nomadic existences away from the body of Christ, won’t fully satisfy the human soul. We were created for covenantal community. Practical Questions Consider honestly this week: Who truly knows your spiritual condition? Who has permission to correct you? Who do you regularly pray with? Who are you strengthening spiritually? Are your closest relationships pulling you toward Christ or away from Him? Have you confused being socially connected with being spiritually known? Are you isolated beneath a busy schedule? Many believers desire deep friendship while resisting the vulnerability required for it. Genuine Christian community requires openness. Humility. Availability. Commitment. Not perfection. Christ & the Greater Brotherhood Ultimately, Christian friendship exists because Christ first brought us into the family of God. “So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God.” - Ephesians 2:19 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ephesians%202%3A19&version=ESV] ESV As we have alluded to here today, the church isn’t a collection of spiritual consumers. It is a redeemed people. A household. A body. A family. And within that family, God often strengthens us through faithful brothers and sisters who help us endure, mature, repent, heal, persevere, and continue walking toward Jesus. The Christian life was never designed to be walked alone. Building a Band of Believers Healthy biblical friendships that we are building here, they rarely appear accidentally. They are cultivated intentionally. Invested in and worked for. Here are some practical ways to strengthen your spiritual community, and to help you get started. I fully appreciate how daunting it can be, how loud the enemy’s voice can be, how vulnerable it can be to put yourself out there: Invite believers into your home Share meals consistently Pray together openly Join smaller discipleship environments Serve alongside other believers Reach out before isolation deepens Speak honestly instead of performatively Confess struggles before they become crises Encourage intentionally Pursue reconciliation quickly Here were the key words there: Invite - Share - Pray - Join - Serve - Reach - Speak - Confess - Encourage - Pursue Often, the strongest Christian friendships are built slowly through ordinary faithfulness. Repeated conversations. Shared burdens. Years of prayer. Mutual service. Depth is formed over time. Through shared struggle, and ultimately, through unity in Christ. This Week’s Practice This week, if you are looking for some way to start on this journey, some step to take, you could begin by trying to intentionally deepen one spiritual relationship. Invite someone to coffee or dinner Pray openly with another believer Reach out to someone who may be isolated Ask a trusted believer an honest spiritual question Encourage someone specifically with Scripture Small acts of intentional community often become the foundation for lifelong spiritual strengthening. So go for it! Watch - Listen - Read Watch How to Build Christian Communities? - Doug Wilson The Christian Family - Alistair Begg Why It’s Important to Have Good Friendships - Fr. Mike Schmitz Listen In the seems | Seth Snider Dancing in the kitchen | Andy Squyres Resting in the Lord | Jacob Early Read Life Together by Dietrich Bonhoeffer - Link [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Life_Together/ZlwXLoF5pYoC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Life+Together+by+Dietrich+Bonhoeffer&printsec=frontcover] The Common Rule by Justin Whitmel Earley - Link [https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Common_Rule/FIJ9EAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=the+common+rule+by+justin+whitmel+earley&printsec=frontcover] What Does the Bible Actually Say About Church Fellowship? The Challenge of Sharing in Community - Link [https://bibleproject.com/articles/fellowship-of-the-church-in-the-bible/] Next Week Month 7, Week 4: Iron Sharpens Iron Next week we will explore how biblical friendship shapes character, endurance, accountability, and long-term discipleship. Anchor Scripture “Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.” - Proverbs 13:20 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs%2013%3A20&version=ESV] ESV Closing Prayer Father, Thank you for not calling us to walk alone. Thank You for the gift of Your Church, Your people, and faithful friendships that strengthen us toward Christ. Help us become believers who encourage truthfully, love sacrificially, listen humbly, and walk faithfully alongside others. Protect us from isolation, hiddenness, pride, and shallow living. Teach us to build relationships rooted in Your presence and Your Word. Give us courage to be known honestly. Give us wisdom to sharpen others gently and faithfully. And help us become the kind of people who strengthen the Church around us. In Jesus’ name, Amen. I’m glad you’re here. Let’s run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up! Grace and peace, Sam Johnston Youtube Channel [https://www.youtube.com/@ChristFocusedNetwork] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/3zHbixG1akUBw9p6RJT4KY?si=b4dcb21644a348b5]| Instagram [http://instagram.com/christfocussed] | Christ Focused Business Course [https://sam-johnston-s-school1.teachable.com/p/building-a-business-with-a-christian-kingdom-mindset?fbclid=PAQ0xDSwKUNyRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABp4eQwuYGqxqjuOyaw0nS1E35pe83C0OLfjHiSjt77Msok92LPzYZiys_zCV8_aem_Tx3aZRDzPnwINRuIEnPzuA] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christfocused.substack.com [https://christfocused.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

21 May 2026 - 17 min
episode Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 2: Faith at the Dinner Table artwork

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 2: Faith at the Dinner Table

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 2: Faith at the Dinner Table Anchor Scripture “And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.”- Deuteronomy 6:6−7 ESV [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%206%3A6-7&version=ESV] Faith at the Dinner Table One of the great misunderstandings of modern Christianity is the assumption that spiritual formation can be outsourced to pastors and Sunday school teachers, that family spiritual growth primarily happens outside of the home, perhaps in church buildings. Biblically - it does not. The synagogue mattered. The temple mattered. Church matters today. Corporate worship mattered and matters deeply today. But the primary environment of discipleship throughout Scripture was actually the household. The home was where theology became embodied.Where worship became visible.Where children learned not merely doctrines, but patterns of life.Where faith moved from abstraction into imitation. This is why Scripture repeatedly places enormous theological weight upon ordinary rhythms of life, the beautiful mundane of daily life. Meals. Hospitality. Fathers blessing children. Mothers teaching wisdom. Shared prayers. Sabbath rhythms. The telling and retelling of God’s acts. Modern Christians often fall into the default of thinking formation happens mainly through information transfer. We live in the age of information, and increasing ease of access to it can make us complacent in utilizing it. Biblical formation happens through immersion. The home immerses people into a way of seeing reality, seeing The Father’s reality, and how life can be lived with him. And the dinner table… well that becomes one of the central liturgies of that formation. It is the beating heart and rhythm of the home. The Biblical Theology of the Table Throughout Scripture, tables aren’t merely functional. They are theological spaces. In the ancient East, to eat with someone implied fellowship, peace, trust, covenantal association, and ultimately - belonging. This is why table fellowship becomes such a major theme across the biblical narrative. In the Old Testament Israel’s feasts weren’t random celebrations. They were covenant rehearsals. Passover was not merely a remembrance. It was participatory remembrance. The family gathered at the table to retell the story of deliverance: “We were slaves.” “God rescued us.” “This meal reminds us who we are.” Notice how profoundly intergenerational this was as well. The meal itself became catechesis. Children would ask questions. Parents would answer through story, theology, and remembrance. The table was therefore educational, spiritual, relational, and covenantal simultaneously. This pattern is embedded directly into Deuteronomy 6. The Meaning of “Teach Them Diligently” The Hebrew phrase translated “teach them diligently” carries a sense of repetition, sharpening, engraving, or impressing deeply. The image is not occasional instruction. It is repeated formation. God is commanding Israel not merely to transfer religious data, but to impress divine truth into the imagination and consciousness of the next generation through continual integration into everyday rhythms of life. This is why the text says: “When you sit in your house…” “When you walk by the way…” “When you lie down…” “When you rise…” The assumption is not that faith occasionally interrupts life. The assumption is that faith interprets life, that it is the rhythm of life. The household in this context becomes a theological ecosystem of its own. A home and family built on the rock. The New Testament and the Table When we move into the ministry of Jesus, the table becomes even more significant. Jesus consistently teaches, restores, confronts, and reveals Himself around meals and around tables. The Gospel of Luke especially presents Christ as frequently either: going to a table for a meal, at a table for a meal, or leaving a table for a meal. This is not accidental. Meals reveal kingdom realities. At tables: sinners are welcomed, status barriers collapse, grace is demonstrated, forgiveness is embodied, truth is spoken, and community is restored. The table becomes a visible sign of the Kingdom of God. This reaches its climax in: the Last Supper, the post-resurrection meals, and ultimately the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. Christianity is profoundly communal and incarnational. God doesn’t just save isolated individuals and lone wolves. He creates a people, a body. And shared meals become one of the recurring signs of that covenantal belonging. The Home as a Liturgical Space Modern homes often associate “liturgy” with formal church traditions - things that happen outside of the home. But liturgy simply refers to repeated practices that shape desire, identity, and imagination. And if we are honest here - every home already has liturgies. The question is not whether your household is being formed. The question is what is forming it. The nightly scroll. The television always on. The fragmented eating patterns. The distracted conversation. The emotionally absent father. The exhausted mother. The constant busyness. All of these form homes and form people. Secular modernity catechizes families constantly. Consumerism forms desires. Technology fragments attention. Entertainment reshapes imagination. Individualism weakens communal identity. The Christian household therefore, requires intentional counter-formation. Not through legalism. But through deliberate rhythms of presence, and purposeful honoring of the scriptural guidance on how we build the rhythms of our family life. The dinner table becomes one of the few remaining spaces where modern families can resist fragmentation and practice attentiveness. Why the Table Matters Spiritually 1. The table slows the soul Formation requires attention. Most modern life trains distraction. But meals force pause. People sit. Look at one another. Listen. Reflect. Share. This creates space for spiritual attentiveness. 2. The table creates memory Many of the deepest memories we carry are meal-centered. Why? Because repeated embodied rhythms shape identity deeply. This is why Israel repeatedly tied remembrance to meals. Memory stabilizes identity. Families who intentionally gather create emotional and spiritual anchors. 3. The table models embodied Christianity Children especially learn theology through observation before articulation. The old “Do as I say, not as I do.” won’t build a foundation for your children. They notice: how conflict is handled, whether parents apologize, whether gratitude is sincere, whether prayer is performative or real, whether Scripture affects behavior, whether Christ is central or merely referenced. Long before children can articulate doctrine, they are interpreting embodied witness. The dinner table becomes one of the clearest windows into lived theology. The Crisis of Presence One of the great modern western obstacles we face is not necessarily hostility toward Christianity. It is distraction. Many homes are physically together while emotionally and spiritually absent. Technology has introduced unprecedented informational connection, matched with relational fragmentation. Theologically, this matters deeply because Christianity is incarnational. God does not save humanity through abstract information alone. “The Word became flesh.” Presence matters because God Himself ministers through presence. Parents therefore disciple not only through instruction, but through availability and real presence. The ministry of attention is increasingly sacred in distracted cultures. Practical Formation at the Table This doesn’t require turning every meal into a seminary lecture. In fact, forced spirituality often produces resistance rather than formation. The goal is integration, not performance. Implementing Practical Rhythms Practice gratitude Gratitude reorients the heart away from entitlement. Repeated thanksgiving trains people to interpret reality through gift rather than scarcity. Ask interpretive questions Instead of merely exchanging information: “What happened today?” Ask formation-oriented questions to those you are discipling: “Where did you experience grace today?” “What challenged your faith today?” “Did you have an opportunity to love someone?” “What are you anxious about right now?” This teaches theological reflection. Normalize confession Healthy homes create safety for repentance. Parents leading by example and apologizing to each other and their children is deeply formative. It demonstrates: humility, accountability, grace, and the reality of sanctification. Pray specifically Generic prayer often becomes ritualistic. Specific prayer based on real family situations based on the here and now, teaches dependence upon God in actual life. A Word to Parents Take off the pressure. You aren’t called to create a perfect household. You are called to cultivate a faithful one. The aim is not polished spirituality. It is sincere, repeated orientation toward Christ. Children don’t need flawless parents. They need repentant ones. They need homes where: grace is visible, Scripture is normal, prayer is practiced, forgiveness is real, and Christ is not merely discussed but followed. Reflection Questions What liturgies currently shape your household most strongly? Does your home cultivate attentiveness or distraction? What does your dinner table currently communicate about what matters most? Are we intentionally forming disciples, or passively absorbing culture? What one rhythm could we begin this week that would move our household toward deeper spiritual presence? This Week’s Practice Choose two meals this week where: phones remain away, gratitude is practiced, one meaningful question is asked, and one intentional prayer is offered. Don’t aim for perfection. Aim for attentiveness. Small repeated practices form families and form people over time. Closing Prayer Father,Teach us to recover the sacredness of ordinary faithfulness. Help our homes become places where Your presence is known naturally and consistently. Give us wisdom to disciple through both word and example. Slow our distracted hearts. Teach us to listen well, speak truthfully, forgive quickly, and give thanks continually. Let our tables become places of peace, formation, hospitality, and remembrance. Form our households into communities shaped by Christ rather than by the pressures of the world. In Jesus’ Holy name, amen. I’m glad you’re here. Let’s run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up! Grace and peace, Sam Johnston Youtube Channel [https://www.youtube.com/@ChristFocusedNetwork] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/3zHbixG1akUBw9p6RJT4KY?si=b4dcb21644a348b5]| Instagram [http://instagram.com/christfocussed] | Christ Focused Business Course [https://sam-johnston-s-school1.teachable.com/p/building-a-business-with-a-christian-kingdom-mindset?fbclid=PAQ0xDSwKUNyRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABp4eQwuYGqxqjuOyaw0nS1E35pe83C0OLfjHiSjt77Msok92LPzYZiys_zCV8_aem_Tx3aZRDzPnwINRuIEnPzuA] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christfocused.substack.com [https://christfocused.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

7 May 2026 - 13 min
episode Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1 Women's Panel | Building the Home artwork

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1 Women's Panel | Building the Home

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1: Home as the First Mission Field Link to M7 W1 initial expositional dispatch: M7 W1 [https://open.substack.com/pub/christfocused/p/month-7-parenthood-and-friendships?r=2uc29g&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web×tamp=25.9] Introduction This week, we’ve grounded ourselves in a simple but weighty truth: Faith is not meant to live at the edges of our lives.It is meant to live at the center of our homes. Through Deuteronomy 6:6–7 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%206%3A6-7&version=ESV] and Joshua 24:15 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Joshua%2024%3A15&version=ESV], we see that spiritual formation is not an event. It is a rhythm. It is built into the everyday life of the household. But Scripture gives us the “what.”This panel gives us the “what does it actually look like?” This conversation brings together women in the midst of real life: Raising children across different ages Balancing work, home, and faith Serving in their communities and churches Navigating the daily “beautiful mess” of family life As shared in the session, these are not theoretical voices. These are women actively building homes in real time, carrying responsibility, joy, pressure, and growth all at once. The Overarching Question This panel explored one core question: What does it actually mean to build a Christ-centered home in real life? Not ideally.Not perfectly.But faithfully. Questions explored: What role does a woman play in shaping the spiritual life of the home? Where do you see your greatest influence day to day? What are the unseen burdens women carry in the home? Where do women most often feel stretched or overwhelmed? How do you respond when leadership is inconsistent or absent? What has been personally challenging in building a Christ-centered home? What does building a spiritually healthy home look like in a normal week? What rhythms or habits have made the biggest difference? How do you disciple children in everyday life? How do you maintain your own relationship with God while pouring into others? Where do women need to guard their hearts spiritually? What encouragement would you give to a woman carrying a lot right now? What does faithfulness look like when it feels unseen? Core Insights from the Panel 1. A Woman Shapes the Spiritual Fabric of the Home 2 Timothy 1:5 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Timothy%201%3A5&version=ESV] One of the most powerful insights was the idea that women are weavers of the home. Not controlling everything.Not doing everything.But taking what is in front of them and forming something meaningful from it. Creating spiritual atmosphere Bringing life to what God is doing in others Holding the family in a space where faith can grow As one panelist described, this is about “taking everything at your fingertips and creating something beautiful, good, and useful out of it.” Another described it as being a “bearer of life”, not just physically, but spiritually within the home. 2. Influence Happens in the Everyday, Not the Extraordinary Proverbs 14:1 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs%2014%3A1&version=ESV] The greatest influence is not found in big moments, but in daily patterns: Tone of the home Emotional steadiness How conflict is handled How connection is maintained One key theme: connection Connection to God Connection within the family Modeling love, accountability, and repair Another core thread was character formation: Modeling humility Apologizing when wrong Putting others first Living out what is being taught Children don’t just listen.They watch. And over time, they mirror. 3. The Weight is Real (And Often Unseen) Galatians 6:2 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Galatians%206%3A2&version=ESV] The panel spoke honestly about the unseen burdens carried in the home: The desire to “do everything well” The pressure to raise children who thrive The feeling of “one shot” at getting it right The constant mental and emotional load One described it as the tension of wanting: “to do well in everything… spiritually, practically, emotionally… all at once” Another captured it simply: “It feels like I get one shot.” And yet, this weight consistently pushed them back to one place: Dependence on the grace of God. 4. Overwhelm is Real — But So is Access to Peace Luke 10:41–42 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2010%3A41%E2%80%9342&version=ESV] The tension of Martha and Mary came alive in the conversation. There are moments where: Everything feels chaotic Everyone needs something The plan falls apart And in those moments, the shift is not always external. It is internal. One panelist described stepping away in the middle of chaos and simply praying: “God, I’ve reached the end of myself… give me wisdom.” And in that moment, everything didn’t change, but her posture did. Another described this as a life of constant surrender: Plans change Expectations shift Control is limited And the invitation is not control. It is presence with God in the moment. 5. Faithfulness Matters — Especially When Leadership is Absent 1 Peter 3:1–2 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Peter%203%3A1%E2%80%932&version=ESV] One of the most important insights: You cannot change your husband. But you can: Pray for him Walk faithfully yourself Model Christ consistently As shared: “Regardless of whether your husband is following the Lord… you still have a call to follow Him.” And Scripture affirms that: Influence is not always through words, but through conduct. There was also a practical encouragement: Seek community Invite other voices into your children’s lives Find godly role models where needed Because formation doesn’t have to happen in isolation. 6. Spiritual Formation Happens in Normal Life Deuteronomy 6:7 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%206%3A7&version=ESV] A major theme across the panel: Don’t overcomplicate it. Spiritual formation looks like: Talking about God in the car Using everyday moments as teaching opportunities Answering children’s questions honestly Living out the gospel in real time One example: Using sunlight in the car to explain Jesus as the light of the world Turning worship songs into conversations Another key pattern: “I share the gospel most days… and then I live it out by asking for forgiveness.” That’s discipleship. Not perfection.Consistency. 7. Your Life is the Loudest Teaching Tool Colossians 3:17 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Colossians%203%3A17&version=ESV] Perhaps the clearest takeaway: Children will become what they see. They watch how you pray They watch how you respond They watch your joy They watch your struggles As one panelist said: “At the end of the day… they’re just going to stand back and watch me.” So the question becomes: Not just what are you teaching…but what are you modeling? 8. Your Relationship with God Must Be Real (Not Rigid) John 15:5 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John%2015%3A5&version=ESV] A powerful theme was the shift from structure to relationship. Before children: Long quiet times Structured rhythms After children: Fragmented time Constant interruption And the realization: God is not limited to structure. Prayer throughout the day Scripture in small moments Ongoing conversation with Him As one said: “We’re just going to have to talk all day long.” And another: “It’s not a checklist… it’s a relationship.” 9. Guarding the Heart is Critical Proverbs 4:23 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs%204%3A23&version=ESV] One specific warning stood out: jealousy and comparison Comparing roles Comparing freedom Comparing seasons And the shift: Recognizing it Surrendering it Refocusing on eternal value Because the work being done is not small: “Caring for human souls that will last for eternity.” Practical Takeaways (From the Panel) Here are simple, actionable insights drawn directly from the conversation: Don’t try to do it all alone → give it to God Pray consistently → something happens every time you pray Read with your children daily → even 5 minutes Make eye contact → connection changes everything Integrate faith into normal life → don’t overcomplicate it Stay faithful in your season → don’t compare Model your faith → don’t just teach it Closing Thought You do not need a perfect home. You need a faithful one. Because what is being built in the quiet, unseen moments…is shaping something that will last far beyond today. I’m glad you’re here. Let’s run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up! Grace and peace, Sam Johnston Youtube Channel [https://www.youtube.com/@ChristFocusedNetwork] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/3zHbixG1akUBw9p6RJT4KY?si=b4dcb21644a348b5]| Instagram [http://instagram.com/christfocussed] | Christ Focused Business Course [https://sam-johnston-s-school1.teachable.com/p/building-a-business-with-a-christian-kingdom-mindset?fbclid=PAQ0xDSwKUNyRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABp4eQwuYGqxqjuOyaw0nS1E35pe83C0OLfjHiSjt77Msok92LPzYZiys_zCV8_aem_Tx3aZRDzPnwINRuIEnPzuA] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christfocused.substack.com [https://christfocused.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

24 Apr 2026 - 51 min
episode Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1 Men's Panel | Leading the Home artwork

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1 Men's Panel | Leading the Home

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1: Home as the First Mission Field Link to M7 W1 initial expositional dispatch: M7 W1 [https://open.substack.com/pub/christfocused/p/month-7-parenthood-and-friendships?r=2uc29g&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web×tamp=25.9] Introduction This week, we’ve anchored ourselves in a clear biblical reality: The home is the first mission field. Through Deuteronomy 6:6–7 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%206%3A6-7&version=ESV] and Joshua 24:15 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Joshua%2024%3A15&version=ESV], Scripture makes it unmistakable that faith is not peripheral. It is central. It is lived, formed, and passed on in the rhythms of daily life. But for men, the call carries a particular weight. Ephesians 5:25 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ephesians%205%3A25&version=ESV] raises the standard beyond preference or personality. It is not passive. It is not optional. It is sacrificial responsibility. This panel exists to answer one question: What does that actually look like in real life? Not in theory.Not in perfection.But in the reality of work, pressure, distraction, and family life. The men in this conversation are not removed from the world. They are in it: Raising families Leading in their homes Working full-time jobs Navigating the pressures of modern life This is real discipleship, in real homes. The Overarching Question At the center of this panel: What does it actually mean for a man to lead his home spiritually? Questions explored: What does it actually mean to lead your home spiritually in practice? When did you personally realize that responsibility sat with you? Where do men most commonly drift or become passive in the home? What does passive leadership actually look like day to day? What has been hardest for you personally in trying to lead your home well? How do you lead when you feel spiritually dry or inconsistent yourself? What does spiritual leadership look like in a normal week for you? What rhythms have actually worked in real life? How do you bring Scripture or prayer into the home without it feeling forced? How do you lead your wife and children in distinct ways? Where do men need to step up right now? What would you say to a man who knows he’s been passive but hasn’t changed? What is at stake if men don’t take this seriously? Core Insights from the Panel 1. Leadership Starts with Personal Foundation Deuteronomy 6:5–7 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%206%3A5%E2%80%937&version=ESV] The first and clearest insight: You cannot lead where you are not going yourself. Leadership in the home is not strategy first.It is overflow. Your relationship with Christ Your understanding of Scripture Your daily walk with God As one panelist put it: “Everything you do as a parent flows out of your relationship with Christ.” Children are not shaped by what you say alone. They are shaped by what overflows from your life. 2. Your Family is Your First Ministry 1 Timothy 3:4–5 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Timothy%203%3A4%E2%80%935&version=ESV] A strong theme emerged: The primary calling of a man is not external success. It is internal leadership. Not just work Not just provision Not just ambition But: Husband Father Spiritual leader of the home As one said: “Your family is your first ministry.” This reframes everything. Success is not defined first by what you build outside.But by what you build inside your home. 3. Responsibility is Realized in the Small Moments Luke 16:10 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2016%3A10&version=ESV] There was no single dramatic moment where responsibility “arrived.” Instead, it showed up in: Conviction Reflection Being mirrored by children One powerful insight: “When your kids reflect you back to you… that’s when it hits.” Leadership is not realized in theory. It is revealed in: Tone Reactions Patterns 4. Passivity is the Greatest Threat 1 Corinthians 16:13 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Corinthians%2016%3A13&version=ESV] One of the clearest warnings: Men don’t usually fail through rebellion. They drift through passivity. This shows up as: Distraction Lack of intentionality Avoidance of responsibility Mental disengagement As described: “If there’s no plan… and life just goes by… that’s a recipe for disaster.” Modern culture amplifies this: Constant distraction Noise Ease Comfort And without intentional resistance, drift is inevitable. 5. Passive Leadership is Often Subtle James 1:22 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James%201%3A22&version=ESV] Passivity doesn’t always look obvious. It can look like: Knowing Scripture but not applying it Consuming content but not changing behavior Wanting to lead, but avoiding action As highlighted: “You can be in the Word… but not applying it.” Or even more practically: “Wanting to change the world… but not doing the dishes at home.” Spiritual leadership is not abstract. It is deeply practical. 6. The Hardest Part is Consistency, Not Knowledge Galatians 6:9 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Galatians%206%3A9&version=ESV] A repeated theme: The challenge is not knowing what to do.It is doing it consistently. Leading devotions Staying present Building rhythms Many expressed: Feeling inadequate Struggling with consistency Fighting discouragement But the insight was clear: “Even 4 out of 7 days matters.” Faithfulness beats perfection. 7. Spiritual Leadership is Built Through Simple Rhythms Deuteronomy 6:7 The most effective practices were not complex. They were simple: Dinner table conversations Daily check-ins Sharing highs and lows Inviting prayer into real life The dinner table stood out as a key environment: “When all else fails… we eat together.” Because it creates: Consistency Connection Opportunity for spiritual conversation 8. Scripture Must Become the Authority of the Home Psalm 119:105 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm%20119%3A105&version=ESV] One of the most powerful shifts: Moving from “because I said so” → “because Scripture says so.” This looks like: Memorizing Scripture Applying it in discipline Using it in decision-making As described: “Our whole home falls under the authority of Scripture.” This changes everything: Removes ego Establishes truth Creates shared accountability 9. Leadership Requires Humility, Not Control James 4:6 Leadership is not dominance. It is: Responsibility Repentance Humility A key insight: “Repentance is the lifeblood of a healthy marriage.” Practical leadership looks like: Being first to apologize Owning mistakes Changing behavior Children and wives don’t just hear leadership. They feel it. 10. The Greatest Risk is Drift Toward Culture Joshua 24:15 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Joshua%2024%3A15&version=ESV] The context of Joshua’s declaration came alive: It was spoken in a moment of comfort, not crisis. And that’s the danger. Ease Stability Cultural influence These create drift. As highlighted: “If you don’t fill the space… the world will.” Leadership requires: Intentionality Watchfulness Decision 11. Shame is a Silent Barrier to Change 2 Corinthians 12:9 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Corinthians%2012%3A9&version=ESV] A powerful and honest insight: Many men know they need to change.They just don’t. Why? Shame Pressure Fear of failure As shared: “Shame is a silent killer of men.” The answer is not trying harder. It is: Humbling yourself Running to God Receiving grace Because: “His grace is what empowers change.” 12. What’s at Stake is Generational Hosea 4:6 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Hosea%204%3A6&version=ESV] This is not just about today. It is about trajectory. Your children Their children The culture they inherit As stated clearly: “This moment can be an inflection point for your family line.” If men do not lead: Others will Culture will The world will And that cost is not small. Practical Takeaways (From the Panel) Simple, actionable steps from the discussion: Be present → no one can replace you Serve your family intentionally Start small → consistency matters more than perfection Establish rhythms → especially around meals Bring Scripture into real situations Be the first to repent Stay watchful → limit distraction Surround yourself with strong men Final Charge This is not about perfection. It is about ownership. Because leadership in the home is not given. It is taken. And the decision is simple: “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” I’m glad you’re here. Let’s run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up! Grace and peace, Sam Johnston Youtube Channel [https://www.youtube.com/@ChristFocusedNetwork] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/3zHbixG1akUBw9p6RJT4KY?si=b4dcb21644a348b5]| Instagram [http://instagram.com/christfocussed] | Christ Focused Business Course [https://sam-johnston-s-school1.teachable.com/p/building-a-business-with-a-christian-kingdom-mindset?fbclid=PAQ0xDSwKUNyRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABp4eQwuYGqxqjuOyaw0nS1E35pe83C0OLfjHiSjt77Msok92LPzYZiys_zCV8_aem_Tx3aZRDzPnwINRuIEnPzuA] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christfocused.substack.com [https://christfocused.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

24 Apr 2026 - 51 min
episode Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1: Home as the First Mission Field artwork

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1: Home as the First Mission Field

Month 7 - Parenthood & Friendships | Week 1: Home as the First Mission Field We often think of mission as something “out there.” Across the street. Across the city. Across the world. But Scripture doesn’t begin there. It begins at the home front. Not as a suggestion, or a secondary priority, but as the first place where faith is formed, tested, and lived. Before platforms, before pulpits, before any form of public witness, there is the home. There is the table, the marriage, the children, and the unseen rhythms of daily life that quietly shape what we truly believe. And if we are honest, this is where things are most easily neglected. It is possible to be outwardly engaged and inwardly passive. It’s possible to speak about faith publicly and yet fail to cultivate it privately. But Scripture neither allows nor condones that separation. The question is not simply whether we believe, but what is being built in the place closest to us. Because the home is not neutral, it is always forming something. The Biblical Design: A Faith That Lives in the Home Deuteronomy 6:6–7 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%206%3A6%E2%80%937&version=ESV] “And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.” This is one of the clearest pictures in Scripture of how faith is meant to function in everyday life. It is not structured around events or confined to specific moments. It is woven into the fabric of daily living. Sitting, walking, resting, running & rising. The ordinary becomes the context for the eternal. What God is describing here is not intensity, but consistency. Not performance, but presence. Faith is not something that visits the home occasionally. It is something that defines the environment over time, through the proof of our convictions found within our actions. This means that discipleship is not primarily a church activity. It is a household reality. The church supports and equips, but the home forms it. It is where beliefs are reinforced, where behaviors are modeled, and where truth is either embodied or quietly contradicted. That is why Scripture speaks not only to individuals, but to households. Joshua 24:15 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Joshua%2024%3A15&version=ESV] “But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” Joshua speaks here with clarity. He doesn’t separate his personal faith from the direction of his home. He understands that leadership carries responsibility, and that a household must be oriented toward something. A home will always move in a direction. The only question is whether that direction is intentional or accidental. If you are directing it, or if the world and the enemy are. Make the decision today, plant your flag in your home, and declare it for the Kingdom. Roles, Responsibility, and the Reality of Formation Ephesians 5:22–33 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ephesians%205%3A22-33&version=ESV] “Wives, submit to your own husbands, as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the church, his body, and is himself its Savior. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in everything to their husbands. Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, so that he might present the church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish. In the same way husbands should love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as Christ does the church, because we are members of his body. “Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.” This mystery is profound, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the church. However, let each one of you love his wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband.” Ephesians 6:1–4 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ephesians%206%3A1%E2%80%934&version=ESV] “Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. “Honor your father and mother” (this is the first commandment with a promise), “that it may go well with you and that you may live long in the land.” Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.” Scripture here doesn’t present the home as a loose collection of individuals surrounding similar desires. It presents it as a structure with responsibility, order, and purpose. Within that structure, roles are given, but not given to restrict, but to assign weight correctly. Men are called to lead, not in dominance, but in sacrificial responsibility. To sacrifice and to lay themselves down for the family, and if necessary, to death, as Christ demonstrated. A leadership that reflects Christ isn’t passive, and it’s not self-serving. It’s intentional, steady, strong, and accountable before God for the direction of the home. The Husband takes on the responsibility and accountability for those under his protection. Women are called to build, not as a secondary role, but as a deeply formative one. Scripture consistently shows the influence of women shaping the spiritual atmosphere of the home with strength, wisdom, and endurance. Often this work is perceived to be less visible, but in reality, the outcomes of their work are visible for the entire world to see, and are foundational. These roles are not in competition. They are designed by God to function together. Equal in value, different in role, but unified and complementary. And when either side withdraws, avoids responsibility, or becomes misaligned, the effect is felt across the entire household. Beyond the daily acceptance of these roles, there is also a deeper generational reality of that felt effect. Whether for the better or worse, our actions today echo through eternity into our children and through into time. 2 Timothy 1:5 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2%20Timothy%201%3A5&version=ESV] “I am reminded of your sincere faith, a faith that dwelt first in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice…” Faith and family strength move through repetition. Through example. It is passed down not only through what is taught, but through what is consistently lived generation to generation, through time itself, honor of God’s order passing through our blood into the ever-moving current age. You don’t drift into a godly home, and your ancestors won’t know of one unless you choose to build one - today, ahead of them. And what you build is not revealed in your intentions, but in your patterns. In what is repeated. In what is prioritized. In what is modeled day after day. This is where the weight of this week’s topic lands. You can be spiritually active and still neglect your home. You can know Scripture and fail to embody it. You can lead publicly and be passive privately. But God is not forming a public image. He is forming a people. And that formation begins in the home. From Scripture to Lived Reality We have seen what the Word of God says. But discipleship is not proven in theory. It is revealed in practice. In conversations that do not go as planned. In days that feel repetitive. In moments where faith must be lived, not just understood. So this week, we are stepping into lived experience. Below are the questions we explored with two panel groups, one panel of men and one of ladies. As you watch and listen, use these not just as prompts for them, but as mirrors for your own home. The full panel dispatches will be going out this week in two separate videos. Panel One: The Men - Leading the Home This conversation explores what it actually means for men to take responsibility for the spiritual direction of their home. It moves beyond theory into the realities of leadership, consistency, pressure, and accountability before God. Questions explored: What does it actually mean to lead your home spiritually in practice? When did you personally realize that responsibility sat with you? Where do men most commonly drift or become passive in the home? What does passive leadership actually look like day to day? What has been hardest for you personally in trying to lead your home well? How do you lead when you feel spiritually dry or inconsistent yourself? What does spiritual leadership look like in a normal week for you? What rhythms have actually worked in real life? How do you bring Scripture or prayer into the home without it feeling forced? How do you lead your wife and children in distinct ways? Where do men need to step up right now? What would you say to a man who knows he’s been passive but hasn’t changed? What is at stake if men don’t take this seriously? Panel Two: The Women - Building the Home This conversation brings forward the perspective that is often less visible, but deeply formative. It explores the shaping of the home through consistency, influence, endurance, and spiritual attentiveness. Questions explored: What role does a woman play in shaping the spiritual life of the home? Where do you see your greatest influence day to day? What are the unseen burdens women carry in the home? Where do women most often feel stretched or overwhelmed? How do you respond when leadership is inconsistent or absent? What has been personally challenging in building a Christ-centered home? What does building a spiritually healthy home look like in a normal week? What rhythms or habits have made the biggest difference? How do you disciple children in everyday life? How do you maintain your own relationship with God while pouring into others? Where do women need to guard their hearts spiritually? What encouragement would you give to a woman carrying a lot right now? What does faithfulness look like when it feels unseen? This is not secondary work. It is foundational work. Bringing It Back to You This is not something to simply observe, read, or listen; it’s not just information. It is something to respond to. Take a moment and consider the direction of your home. Not what you intend, but what is actually being formed. What rhythms are shaping your household right now? What is being repeated, reinforced, and modeled on a daily basis? Where have you been passive in a place where God is calling you to be intentional? And what needs to change this week, not someday, but now? Start small, but start deliberately. Establish one daily moment where faith is made visible. A short prayer, a passage of Scripture, a simple conversation. Not as a performance, but as a pattern. Because over time, it is not intensity that shapes a home. It is consistency. Closing Thought You do not need a perfect home. You need a directed one. Because direction, over time, determines outcome. I’m glad you’re here. Let’s run the race - Eyes Up, Chin Up! Grace and peace, Sam Johnston Youtube Channel [https://www.youtube.com/@ChristFocusedNetwork] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/3zHbixG1akUBw9p6RJT4KY?si=b4dcb21644a348b5]| Instagram [http://instagram.com/christfocussed] | Christ Focused Business Course [https://sam-johnston-s-school1.teachable.com/p/building-a-business-with-a-christian-kingdom-mindset?fbclid=PAQ0xDSwKUNyRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABp4eQwuYGqxqjuOyaw0nS1E35pe83C0OLfjHiSjt77Msok92LPzYZiys_zCV8_aem_Tx3aZRDzPnwINRuIEnPzuA] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit christfocused.substack.com [https://christfocused.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

24 Apr 2026 - 16 min
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