Field Notes: 5 Day Devo

Let your light shine Day 1

5 min · 18 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Let your light shine Day 1

Descripción

Jesus walks out of the wilderness and makes a move that still confronts our instincts today. He doesn’t head to the religious center to prove a point. He goes straight to Zebulon and Naphtali, the Galilee of the Gentiles, a rough borderland shaped by compromise, trade, and outsiders. That choice isn’t random. It’s a picture of how the kingdom of God brings light into the places we’d rather avoid.  We connect that moment in Matthew 4 to a modern story from law enforcement shifts in Deltona, where the “darkness” isn’t theoretical. It shows up in fractured marriages, stressed families, and the quiet hopelessness inside everyday homes. The honest impulse is to run for a safer zip code, a cleaner job, a calmer circle. But the gospel doesn’t teach escape. Jesus leaves heaven for earth, and his followers are sent the same direction: toward need, not away from it.  Then we zoom in on John 1 and a powerful reality: darkness doesn’t overpower light. Darkness is what’s left when light leaves. Flip the switch and everything changes. That’s where the challenge gets practical. We name the ways the church can build a comfortable Christian subculture, then we take Jesus seriously in Mark 2: a doctor has to go where the sick are. We end with a simple action step to “strike a match” in one dark corner of your life today.  If this daily devotional strengthens you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. Where do you need to turn the light on this week?

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32 episodios

episode Day 2- Spot Dissection artwork

Day 2- Spot Dissection

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.

26 de may de 20264 min
episode Day 1: Disciple Or Convert artwork

Day 1: Disciple Or Convert

Monday can expose what Sunday can hide. If faith feels like a quick boost that wears off by lunchtime, we need a better definition of what it means to follow Jesus. We sit down for a tight five-minute devotional that asks one uncomfortable question: are we living as disciples or as converts who made a one-time decision and moved on? We look back at the Second Great Awakening and Charles Finney’s influence on the altar call, not to pick a fight, but to name a shift that still shapes Christian culture today. When faith becomes a transaction, we start treating church like a weekly stop for a “Jesus fix” before we return to what we call real life. Discipleship, though, is not attendance and it is not a sales pitch. It is apprenticeship. A disciple walks so closely with the teacher that the teacher’s ways begin to show up in everyday speech, reactions, priorities, and relationships. Luke 9 brings the point into focus: Jesus calls us to lay down our lives, pick up our cross, and follow Him daily. Daily means Monday, stress at work, money decisions, and the way we talk to our spouse. We also reflect on a Barna statistic that 24% of Christians do not actively pursue their faith outside the building, then we offer one clear action step to move from consuming information to practicing obedience. If you want practical Christian discipleship, real spiritual growth, and a simple way to test whether you’re apprenticing under Jesus, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a Monday reset, and leave a review. What is one area of your life you want to look more like Jesus this week?

Ayer4 min
episode Let your light shine Day 5 artwork

Let your light shine Day 5

Darkness isn’t an equal opponent to light, and that one belief changes how we walk into every room. We’re closing out the week with a grounded challenge from Matthew 5:14: Jesus calls us the light of the world, not just when we’re gathered at church, but on Monday in the everyday places we usually overlook, the gas station, the living room, the workplace, the tense conversation we’d rather avoid.  We talk about why simple community outreach like a free barbecue matters, not as a stunt, but as a way to set tables, meet neighbors, and create space for people who feel stuck or unseen. When someone is “living in the dark,” practical love, food, rest, and real connection can be the first crack where hope gets in. Discipleship and spiritual growth often look like ordinary hospitality, steady presence, and choosing to care on purpose.  Then we take a brutal honesty inventory: when people plan a party or build a guest list, do they want us there because we bring life and peace, or because they feel obligated? That question leads to the core image of the day: be a thermostat that changes the temperature, not a thermometer that mirrors the toxicity around you. You don’t have to solve everything at once. Pick the single darkest corner of your life and do one specific sacrificial act of grace, service, or humility, then watch what one “match” can start.  If this encouraged you, subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next, share it with a friend who needs a reset, and leave a quick review to help more people find the show. Where are you choosing to bring light this week?

22 de may de 20264 min
episode Let your light shine Day 4 artwork

Let your light shine Day 4

The scariest part of being known isn’t that people might judge us, it’s that they might finally see what we’ve worked so hard to hide. We talk candidly about “exposing our own shadows” and why the darkness Jesus describes doesn’t only live in the secular world. It can thrive in church culture too, especially when we learn how to perform “blessed and highly favored” while our real life quietly falls apart behind the scenes.  We unpack the gap between the parking lot smile and the car-ride arguments, the silent strain on marriage, the pressure of parenting, and the bone-deep exhaustion we keep off the record. We also name the temptation to pray for God’s help while refusing the very help He provides through community. Christian community, confession, and accountability aren’t a downgrade from spiritual power, they’re often the delivery system God uses for repentance, healing, and lasting change.  You’ll leave with a clear action step: take the mask off and bring one real struggle into the light with a mature, trustworthy brother or sister in Christ. If you’re tired of pretending and ready for authentic faith, practical discipleship, and real spiritual growth, press play. Then subscribe, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the freedom that starts with honesty.

21 de may de 20263 min
episode Let your light shine Day 3 artwork

Let your light shine Day 3

Darkness feels powerful when you treat it like an equal opponent to light. We challenge that assumption with a simple, almost “physics-like” way to think about spiritual warfare: darkness is not a force that advances on its own, it’s what’s left when light is absent. That one shift changes how we view fear, temptation, and the quiet compromises that creep into daily life.  We ground the conversation in Scripture, from Genesis where God separates light from darkness, to John 1 where Jesus is named the light the darkness cannot overcome. Then we get painfully practical. I share a moment in a Publix aisle where I saw a grown man in tears and felt a clear nudge to pray, but I chose comfort and silence instead. By the time I turned back, he was gone and the opportunity went with him.  That story opens up the real battleground: social self-preservation. We don’t want to look strange, we don’t want to get too personal, and we don’t want to risk rejection. But when we hide our light at home, at work, and in public, we unintentionally give darkness space to stay. We end with a clear action step for Christian living: notice the Holy Spirit’s promptings, obey quickly, and bring light into ordinary moments through prayer, kindness, and courage.  If this encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Where do you feel tempted to put a lampshade on your light today?

20 de may de 20264 min