Anchored & Armed
EPISODE SUMMARY Kirsten Hyatt is a dual-military Army First Lieutenant and Military Intelligence Officer stationed at Fort Polk, La. A VMI ROTC graduate, Kirsten came to faith at 21 while stationed at Fort Benning and has been navigating what it looks like to keep Christ first ever since. In this conversation, Kirsten reflects on the practical habits that helped her pursue God while single, how she navigated dating with Biblical convictions, and the ways she and her husband intentionally stay spiritually connected amid the demands of dual-military life. She also offers honest insights into motherhood, identity, and learning to rely on God through changing seasons of life. If you're a Christian woman in uniform trying to hold your faith, your marriage, and your career together without losing yourself in any one of them, this episode is for you. >Mentioned in this episode: Weekly Marriage Questions Naomi spoke briefly about a set of weekly marriage questions she and her husband use to stay spiritually and relationally connected. These are questions they ask each other every Sunday, regardless of time zones or distance. She credits these questions from The Marriage Journal by Beating 50 Percent [https://www.beating50percent.com/products/themarriagejournal?srsltid=AfmBOopC-KQ1R0TpmVhWzXvHaP-q4LV47kterldqIKHGuzYnUkQm2yDn] as "wildly helpful." The questions are: 1. What brought you joy this week? 2. What was something hard for you this week? 3. What's one specific thing I can do for you this week? 4. How can I pray for you this week? 5. Is there something that's gone unsaid—convictions, confessions, or unresolved hurt? 6. What's a dream, desire, or thought that's been on the forefront of your mind this week? >Other resources for listeners: * Discover OCF's Women's Ministry [https://www.ocfusa.org/sisterhood/] * Contact the podcast via email [anchored@ocfusa.org] * Access the Anchored & Armed contact form [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScRfAVj0Qc5FgN94ygU2sE7T5xcw6ltpuGIJ2pcv9WckyGBmw/viewform] >Questions answered and themes covered in this interview include: 1. How can a Christian woman in the military keep her faith strong during singleness? Worship, Scripture, and prayer are practical anchors, and they work even within the demanding rhythms of military life. During her single season, Kirsten prioritized getting into the Word during any downtime, praying consistently, and leaning into worship—both as a participant and as a member of her church worship team. Also, listening to worship music while working out helped keep her mind centered. While worship was the primary way she connected with God during that season, prayer was a close second. Having a literal prayer closet helped, too: "It's dark in there—it's just you and the Lord." Her advice for single women: your worth is in Christ, not in any relationship. "Don't compromise on anything. Your worth is in Christ, and that's what matters. And then once you find someone that sees your worth in Christ first, then maybe we can pursue something." 2. How can Christian women discern who to date or marry? Look for someone already running toward God, not someone you hope to bring along. Keeping a written prayer journal and seeking counsel from trusted believers were Kirsten's two most concrete tools for discernment. She kept a notebook where she wrote out prayers for a specific kind of partner—someone Christ-centered, God-fearing, and marked by the fruit of the Spirit—and returned to it when she met someone new to test whether her feelings aligned with what she had brought before the Lord. She also relied on close friends in her church community for honest input. Her framing: "Is this someone that's going to go along for the walk together, and nobody's dragging anybody? You guys are together on the walk." She describes passing on relationships where the man wasn't pursuing the Lord, recognizing that it wasn't her job to lead someone to faith through a romantic relationship. 3. How do dual military Christian couples stay spiritually connected with different schedules? Daily rhythms, however brief, and intentional grace toward one another make it possible—even when schedules don't align. Kirsten and her husband, who works 48-on/48-off shifts, read through a book of the Bible together each morning over coffee, discussing it then or in the evening. When that isn't possible, he calls her to talk through it. Praying together every night before bed is also important, with each sharing what they're struggling with and praying over the other out loud. Kirsten attributes the grace in their marriage—the pattern of quick apology and mutual accountability—directly to Christ being at the center: "That is only by the grace of God that we can do that with each other." 4. How do Christian military officers live out their faith at work? Live visibly differently without making it a point of confrontation. In a military environment she calls "spiritually dead," Kirsten doesn't curse around her soldiers, doesn't participate in gossip, and doesn't conform to the surrounding culture. She doesn't announce her faith, but her soldiers know she's a Christian because of how she acts. Her motivation is explicitly missional: "If even one person will get to join me in the kingdom of heaven, my work in the Army means something." The distinction can be described as "being different, not better than." Here's something else to consider: being identified as a believer by those around you matters not only for those who don't yet believe, but also for fellow Christians who may, in a moment of need, know exactly who they can call. 5. How can a Christian mom keep her faith a priority with a newborn? Prayer doesn't have to be long or formal; it just has to be consistent. This is how Kirsten has maintained her relationship with the Lord since becoming a mom. She prays while breastfeeding, while rocking her son, while cooking dinner. When her son is fussy, she turns on worship music and dances with him. While many things change with a new baby—time in the gym, time alone, uninterrupted quiet—prayer remains available anywhere, at any time. The central spiritual lesson motherhood has taught her is relinquishing control: "I can't control when he's going to nap, when he's going to wake up." She describes this season's word as "submission"—a posture of continually surrendering to the Lord in a role where she has no prior experience and no guaranteed outcomes. >Anchor Verse: Matthew 22:37–38 (ESV): "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment."
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