Field Notes: 5 Day Devo
Most of us don’t like to admit it, but we often approach faith the way a lazy fisherman approaches the water: pull up anywhere, toss out bait, and hope something meaningful happens. Today’s Field Notes devotion flips that mindset with a practical concept we call spot dissection, the kind of preparation serious anglers do before the boat ever hits the water. The surprising lesson is simple: fish aren’t everywhere, and spiritual growth isn’t either. If you want to grow in discipleship, you have to learn where formation actually happens and then position your life on purpose. We walk through what fish are really looking for: safety from predators, consistent food, oxygenated water, and a comfortable environment. Then we connect the dots to why Jesus chose fishermen instead of Pharisees. Fishermen understand targeted effort, patience, and the discipline of doing unglamorous work when nobody’s watching. That’s a direct challenge to weekend warrior Christianity, where we drift from Sunday to Sunday and call it maturity. If our plan is mostly “show up and see what happens,” we shouldn’t be surprised when our faith feels shallow. From there, we get concrete about Christian habits and spiritual formation. Time is a budget, and what we put into our minds shapes our hearts. The music we play, the podcasts we choose, the YouTube we watch, and the hours we lose to social media scrolling aren’t neutral, they’re shaping how we see the world and how we respond to God. We close with a simple action step: identify your “ladyfish,” the foundational prep work you’ve been avoiding, and spend 15 minutes actively studying Scripture (Matthew 4:23 is a great place to start). If you want more consistent spiritual growth, clearer priorities, and a faith that looks like following Jesus Monday through Saturday, press play. Then subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find Field Notes.
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