The Kingdom Corner with Matt Geib

"What it Means To Be A Witness For Christ"

18 min · 14. mai 2026
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KINGDOM CORNER READING ROOM — SHOW NOTES WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A WITNESS FOR CHRIST READING & REFLECTION FROM PRACTICING THE WAY BY JOHN MARK COMER What does it truly mean to be a witness for Jesus? In today’s Reading Room session, Matt continues through the Doing as Jesus Did section of Practicing the Way, exploring the call to preach the gospel — not merely through arguments or techniques, but through a transformed life. This episode challenges the common fear and pressure many believers feel around evangelism and reframes witnessing in a deeply freeing way: > “We are not responsible for outcomes any more than a witness is responsible for the ruling in a trial.” A witness simply tells what they have seen and experienced. MAIN THEMES FROM TODAY’S READING WITNESSING IS IDENTITY BEFORE ACTIVITY Witness is not merely something we do — it is something we are. Jesus said: > “You will be My witnesses…” We are not salespeople trying to “close the deal.” We are people who bear witness to the life of Christ we ourselves have encountered. WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR OUTCOMES One of the strongest insights from today’s reading: * People have agency and free will * Salvation involves both God’s initiative and human response * Our role is faithfulness, not control > “Our job is not to save people. It is to bear witness.” “DO THE STUFF” Matt also reflects on the famous phrase from John Wimber: “WHEN DO WE GET TO DO THE STUFF?” This section explores: * Spiritual gifts * Healing * Prophetic encouragement * Words of knowledge * Living naturally supernatural lives Not in manipulation or hype — but in calm, loving, Spirit-led ways. LIVING A BEAUTIFUL LIFE One of the most compelling sections of the reading centers on 1 Peter 2:12. The Greek word translated “good” can also mean: * beautiful * lovely * compelling The early church often evangelized not through celebrity platforms — but through ordinary believers living radically different lives: * practicing Sabbath * hospitality * generosity * community * faithfulness in marriage * emotionally healthy relationships * serving others > “Do not underestimate the raw power of simply practicing the way of Jesus in community.” A WITNESS AND A MARTYR A striking insight from today’s reading: The Greek word for witness is closely connected to the word martyr. In the early church: * witnessing often cost reputation * comfort * status * ambition * sometimes even life itself Matt reflects honestly on how difficult this can be in modern culture: to remain faithful while risking rejection, misunderstanding, or embarrassment. REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. What was your first reaction when you realized believers are called to preach the gospel? 2. Could learning to become a better listener actually make us better witnesses for Christ? 3. Are people drawn toward the beauty and peace of your life with Jesus? FINAL REFLECTION Sometimes we make evangelism far more complicated than it needs to be. As we truly walk with Jesus… as we live in healthy community… as our lives are transformed… the gospel begins to naturally overflow from us. Not forced. Not mechanical. But alive. COMING FRIDAY Next Reading Room session: DEMONSTRATING THE GOSPEL Continuing through: PRACTICING THE WAY Be with Jesus. Become like Him. Do as He did.

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episode The Practices Defined~Pt. 2 cover

The Practices Defined~Pt. 2

KINGDOM CORNER READING ROOM THE PRACTICES DEFINED (PART 2) JUNE 5, 2026 In this episode of the Kingdom Corner Reading Room, we continue our journey through Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer. What exactly are spiritual disciplines? Are they merely religious habits, or are they something much deeper? We explore the idea that spiritual disciplines are not ways to earn God's approval, but rather ways of positioning ourselves to receive His transforming grace. As Dallas Willard and other Christian thinkers remind us, transformation is a partnership with God. We make space; God does the transforming. This episode also introduces the first two core practices of Jesus: * Sabbath * Solitude and Silence These foundational practices help us slow down, hear God's voice, cultivate joy, and live from a place of rest rather than exhaustion. IN THIS EPISODE * A spiritual discipline as a way to access God's power * The partnership between God's work and our participation * Why transformation is impossible through willpower alone * Turning everyday activities into channels of grace * The importance of Sabbath in an exhausted culture * Solitude and silence as gateways to God's presence * Why rest and quiet are essential for spiritual formation * Practical ways to create space for God in everyday life KEY QUOTE > "A spiritual discipline is a way to access God's power because we are making ourselves available to Him." REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. Is there an activity you already enjoy—walking, gardening, fishing, exercise, reading, or another hobby—that could become a spiritual practice through intentional awareness of God's presence? 2. How practiced are you in solitude before God? When was the last time you simply listened rather than spoke? 3. Are you living from a place of rest, or from a place of constant exhaustion and hurry? SCRIPTURE REFERENCES * Philippians 2:13 * Romans 6:13 * Matthew 11:28-30 * Mark 1:35 * Luke 5:16 FINAL THOUGHT The goal of spiritual disciplines is not performance but transformation. We are not trying to impress God; we are learning to make room for Him. As we slow down, rest, listen, and practice His presence, God gradually reshapes our hearts into the likeness of Christ. Keep seeking. Keep growing. Keep listening. One day at a time. Kingdom Corner Podcast Helping you live the Kingdom culture on earth as it is in heaven. 📖 Searching for Significance: A Devotional Journey Through Ecclesiastes Available through the Significance Academy. ☕ If these teachings encourage and strengthen your faith journey, consider supporting the ministry through Buy Me a Coffee. Your support helps continue the work of teaching, podcasting, and equipping others to walk with Christ in everyday life.buymeacoffee.com/ [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge]pZ923Ye7Ge [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/pZ923Ye7Ge]

I går19 min
episode "The Practices Defined" cover

"The Practices Defined"

KINGDOM CORNER READING ROOM THE PRACTICES DEFINED PRACTICING THE WAY – JOHN MARK COMER Episode Date: June 4, 2026 In today's Reading Room, Matt continues through Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer, exploring what spiritual practices are—and perhaps more importantly, what they are not. Many believers have wrestled with the tension between personal effort and dependence upon God's grace. Are spiritual disciplines simply religious routines? Are they a way to earn God's favor? Or are they something deeper? Drawing from Comer's teaching, this episode examines how the practices of Jesus are not ends in themselves, but pathways that position us to receive the transforming work of the Holy Spirit. IN THIS EPISODE * Why spiritual disciplines are a means, not the destination * The difference between formation and mere religious activity * Why love—not discipline—is the true measure of spiritual maturity * How practices can become lifeless routines when disconnected from relationship * The danger of using spiritual disciplines for appearances or self-righteousness * Why spiritual practices are not about earning God's approval * Understanding the difference between "trying harder" and "training wiser" * How disciplines create space for God's grace and transformation KEY QUOTE > "Spiritual disciplines are the Jesus-designed way of offering yourself to God so that you can draw on what the Apostle Paul called grace—the empowering presence of God's Spirit." POWERFUL INSIGHT A discipline is: > "Any activity I can do by direct effort that will eventually enable me to do what I currently cannot do by direct effort." Just as athletes train to become capable of what they cannot yet do naturally, disciples practice the way of Jesus so they can increasingly live and love as He did. REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. Do you see spiritual disciplines primarily as religious duties, or as ways of making yourself available to God's transforming presence? 2. Where in your life are you trying harder when God may be inviting you to train differently? 3. Are your spiritual habits producing greater love, joy, and Christlikeness—or simply maintaining routine? 4. What is one practice that consistently helps you become more aware of God's presence? FINAL THOUGHT The goal of spiritual disciplines is not performance but formation. Prayer, Scripture reading, worship, Sabbath, community, and service are not spiritual scorecards. They are invitations into a life with God. As followers of Jesus, we do not practice these things to earn His love. We practice them because we are loved, and through them we learn to live more deeply in that love. Join us tomorrow as we continue exploring the practices of Jesus and how they shape a Rule of Life that leads not to legalism, but to freedom, joy, and transformation. RESOURCES * Practicing the Way: Be With Jesus, Become Like Him, Do As He Did by John Mark Comer * Searching for Significance: A Devotional Journey Through Ecclesiastes by Matthew Geib The Kingdom Corner Podcast Helping believers pursue Kingdom living, spiritual formation, and a deeper walk with Christ.

4. juni 202619 min
episode "David: The Shepherd, The King, & The Heart of God" cover

"David: The Shepherd, The King, & The Heart of God"

KINGDOM CORNER PODCAST THE SHEPHERD, THE KING, AND THE HEART BEHIND THE THRONE STEWARDSHIP OF POWER SERIES – EPISODE 3 David is one of the most beloved figures in all of Scripture—a shepherd, warrior, worshiper, nation-builder, and king. Yet his story is also one of failure, repentance, mercy, and redemption. In this episode, we continue our Stewardship of Power series by exploring the life of David and asking one of history's most important questions: What kind of person can truly be trusted with power? From the shepherd fields of Bethlehem to the throne room of Jerusalem, David's life reveals that the greatest issue is never power itself—it is the condition of the heart that holds it. Along the way we discover: * Why God often forms character in obscurity before granting influence * The lessons David learned as a shepherd long before becoming king * Why waiting for God's timing may be one of the greatest tests of leadership * How David united a nation through both spiritual and civic leadership * The dangers that accompany success, influence, and unchecked authority * David's failure with Bathsheba and the power of genuine repentance * The cost of leadership and the burdens hidden behind the crown * Why future kings were measured against David despite his imperfections * How David ultimately points us to Jesus, the greater Son of David This episode reminds us that greatness is not found in perfection, but in a heart that continually turns back toward God. KEY SCRIPTURES * Psalm 27:4 * 1 Samuel 16 * 1 Samuel 17 * 1 Samuel 24 * 1 Samuel 26 * 2 Samuel 5–7 * 2 Samuel 11–12 * Psalm 51 * Isaiah 22:22 * Revelation 3:7 * Mark 10:47 QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION 1. David was capable of both great faithfulness and great failure. How do I respond when confronted with my own weaknesses and shortcomings? 2. What am I truly pursuing right now—power, success, comfort, recognition, or a deeper relationship with God? 3. If others evaluated my life, what consistent pattern would they see? What kind of legacy am I building in my family, church, community, or sphere of influence? 4. Am I placing my confidence primarily in human leaders, institutions, and earthly kingdoms, or in Jesus Christ, the King whose kingdom will never end? MEMORABLE THOUGHT > "David's greatness was not that he pursued power. Despite all his failures, he never stopped pursuing the heart of God." CLOSING ENCOURAGEMENT David's story reminds us that God is not searching for perfect people. He is looking for hearts that remain responsive to Him. Whether we lead a nation, a business, a church, a family, or simply steward the influence God has entrusted to us, the greatest issue is not the amount of power we possess—but the condition of the heart that guides it. In the end, the future of a king, a nation, a church, a family, and a life is determined not merely by the power it holds, but by the heart that directs it. NEXT ON THE KINGDOM CORNER Join us Thursday and Friday in the Reading Room as we continue through John Mark Comer's Practicing the Way: Be With Jesus, Become Like Him, Do As He Did. Until next time, keep pursuing the heart of God.

2. juni 202634 min
episode "Four Things A Good Rule Of Life Will Do For You" cover

"Four Things A Good Rule Of Life Will Do For You"

KINGDOM CORNER READING ROOM – SHOW NOTES FOUR THINGS A GOOD RULE OF LIFE WILL DO FOR YOU In today’s Kingdom Corner Reading Room, Matt continues through Practicing the Way by John Mark Comer and explores one of the most practical and transformational themes in the Christian life: developing a personal “Rule of Life.” This episode moves beyond inspiration into implementation. It’s one thing to desire spiritual growth—it’s another thing entirely to build a life that actually supports it. Matt reflects on the importance of putting vision into practice, living in alignment with your deepest values, finding peace in a distracted world, and learning the balance between freedom and discipline. Throughout the episode, listeners are encouraged to begin crafting their own unique Rule of Life—a practical, flexible plan for living intentionally with Jesus in everyday life. IN THIS EPISODE * Why good intentions alone rarely produce transformation * “To fail to plan is to plan to fail” — lessons from Matt’s grandfather * How a Rule of Life bridges the gap between vision and reality * The difference between inspiration and practiced formation * Golf, baseball, and muscle memory as pictures of spiritual growth * Why peace often disappears when our schedules drift from our values * Living with resistance against distraction in the digital age * The importance of pace, rhythm, and avoiding both burnout and stagnation * The tension between freedom and discipline in spiritual life * Why a Rule of Life is a guide—not a prison * The “peace barometer” analogy and recognizing internal warning signs * Practical encouragement to begin writing out your own Rule of Life KEY QUOTES & IDEAS > “A rule of life can bridge the gap between aspirational ideas and authentic transformation.” > “Be quick, but don’t hurry.” > “We achieve inner peace when our schedule aligns with our values.” > “A rule is a map and a path, not a straitjacket.” > “You either fail to plan, or plan to fail.” REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. Are there spiritual goals or disciplines you’ve repeatedly struggled to maintain because there was never a clear plan behind them? 2. How is your “peace barometer” today? 3. Are there subtle signs of inner turbulence, distraction, irritability, or emotional exhaustion developing beneath the surface? 4. What practical adjustments could help bring your daily life back into alignment with your deepest spiritual desires? 5. What habits, distractions, or time commitments may need to be reduced in order to create more room for formation in Christ? SCRIPTURES & THEMES REFERENCED * Spiritual formation through intentional practice * Peace through alignment and surrender * Endurance, discipline, and pacing in the Christian life * Freedom versus legalism * Living intentionally in a distracted digital culture RESOURCES MENTIONED PRACTICING THE WAY: BE WITH JESUS, BECOME LIKE HIM, DO AS HE DID by Practicing the Way SEARCHING FOR SIGNIFICANCE: A DEVOTIONAL JOURNEY THROUGH ECCLESIASTES by Matthew Geib CLOSING THOUGHT Transformation rarely happens accidentally. A healthy spiritual life is not built merely on inspiration, emotion, or good intentions—but through thoughtful rhythms, practiced devotion, and a life intentionally shaped around following Jesus. As this weekend begins, perhaps this is the time to ask: “What kind of life am I actually building?”

29. mai 202619 min
episode "You Already Have A Rule Of Life" cover

"You Already Have A Rule Of Life"

THE KINGDOM CORNER READING ROOM YOU ALREADY HAVE A RULE OF LIFE BASED ON PRACTICING THE WAY BY JOHN MARK COMER Hello, and welcome to the Kingdom Corner podcast, where you can propel your faith into even deeper levels as we discuss how to live the Kingdom culture on earth as it is in heaven, just as Jesus prayed. Here’s your host, The Great Matt Gibe. Good day, good day, Kingdom Corner Reading Room readers and devotees. The Great Matt Geib here to welcome you again to another episode of the Kingdom Corner Reading Room, where we slow down, open a good book, and let the truth shape us one page at a time. Today we’re back into our book, Practicing the Way: Be With Jesus, Become Like Him, Do As He Did, by John Mark Comer. Here’s a thought I’d like you to carry with you as we read through this section today. Just one simple question: Do you know what your rule of life is? Do you know what your rule of life is? We’ve already started this section. We’re on page 162: You Already Have a Rule of Life. The author, John Mark Comer, is talking about how we already — each of us — have a rule of life. That is the way we live each and every day almost without thinking about it. A default way of living. Things that we do that become automatic habits and rhythms. It can be positive, or it can be negative. You already have one. And I want you to think about that and reflect upon it too. So let’s get into our reading, and perhaps you’ll become more enlightened about this topic. YOU ALREADY HAVE A RULE OF LIFE “Here’s the thing: you already have a rule of life. It may be written or unwritten, conscious or subconscious, wise or foolish, based on a long-term vision or short-term instant gratification, moving you toward a desired destination or sabotaging your best intentions. But even if you’ve never heard of a rule of life until two minutes ago, you do have one. You have a way in which you live — a morning routine, a typical workday, a network of relationships, a budget, activities you spend your free time on, and so on. The question isn’t, Do you have a rule of life? It’s: Do you know what your rule of life is? And is it giving you the life you want? Is it working for you or against you? The best way to tell is to take a kind of spiritual self-inventory — an honest assessment of your life.” I love this little saying that comes from the business world: > “Your system is perfectly designed to give you the results you are getting.” I like to apply that maxim not to a widget factory or the bottom line on a spreadsheet, but to the health and growth of our souls — or lack thereof. “If your emotional life is off-kilter, if you feel far from God, stressed, anxious, and chronically mad, if you’re not becoming more of a person of love, then the odds are that something about the system of your life is poorly designed. Because your life is the byproduct of your lifestyle. The problem is not that your rule of life isn’t working — but that it is.” Francis Spufford, in his case for Christian spirituality, wrote about the feeling of waking up on a Saturday morning with a mild hangover, a bit lonely, empty, and unfulfilled — and how at some point you have to grapple with the fact that your free choices aren’t delivering the life you want. Your freedom is what got you here, not your constraint. “A rule of life is an invitation to a very different definition of freedom than that of the modern world — an invitation to embrace the constraints that, if you give yourself to them, will eventually set you free.” The novelist Annie Dillard famously said: > “How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.” But read through the lens of spiritual formation, how we spend our days doesn’t just determine what we do with our one precious fleeting life, but also who we become. Picking up your phone first thing upon waking and checking social media isn’t just a habit — it’s a choice to let yourself become formed into a certain kind of person. Spending more time reading the news than reading Scripture isn’t just wrong — it’s a choice to become more like your favorite news commentators than like Jesus. Spending your money on yet another thing you don’t really need isn’t just playing around with disposable income — it’s feeding an appetite within you that will only grow more ravenous. All these things we do… do something to us. They form us. GUARDING AND GUIDING “A rule of life must balance two sides of an emotional equation. It must guard and it must guide.” The Christian intellectual Andy Crouch beautifully defines a rule of life as: > “A set of practices to guard our habits and guide our lives.” Let’s circle back to the vine metaphor. A gardener has two jobs: to tend the plants and keep out the weeds. In the same way, each of us needs to ask: * What do I want to put into my life? * What do I want to keep out? * What do I want to grow? * What do I want to die? “If you were to look at my rule — one I live by with a small community of friends — you’d see a bunch of spiritual disciplines you would likely expect: an hour of quiet time each morning to pray and read Scripture, a weekly Sabbath and meal with my community, a monthly day in solitude, and so on. But then you’d see a bunch of odd — but for me, keystone — habits that don’t show up on any historical rule of life because they are mostly my way of dealing with the dark underbelly of the digital age. Really, they are more like anti-habits — my attempt at counter-formation.” Here are a few examples: 1. Parenting my phone. 2. “I have an old-school analog alarm clock by my bed. My phone goes to bed at 8:30 PM each night tucked away in a drawer in my home office. And it isn’t allowed up until I’m finished with my morning time of prayer and hit my daily quota for writing.” 3. Practicing a full 24-hour digital Sabbath. 4. “We power off all devices — our phones, computers, TV — for the entirety of our weekly day of rest and worship.” 5. Limiting social media use to one day a week. 6. “I think of it like breathing toxic fumes. Sometimes necessary to live in the modern world, but no good for you. Too much will kill you.” 7. Limiting intake of media — TV, film, YouTube — to a maximum of four hours a week. “Notice these are more like rules, but the heart behind them is not legalism. I’m well aware they aren’t a measure of my spiritual maturity at all. If anything, my need for them is a measure of my immaturity. Not one of them makes me any more loving or holy. I just recognize the power of things like technology and media to form and deform me.” Left unchecked, these things are designed to consume our lives and shape us into a specific kind of person — one wildly unlike Jesus. “But my deepest desire is for God to consume my life and, in time, shape me into His image.” “I very much believe we all need at least some rules around our phones. And should we choose to play with fire — social media.” Does that grate on you? Are you thinking, But I’m a free spirit. I don’t like to be controlled. “I hate to break it to you — you are being controlled by your addiction to your phone, the appetites of your body for pleasure, the spooky algorithms of Silicon Valley. Coming up with rules can put your life back under the control of your deepest desires. Choose your own constraints or they will choose for you.” Not by the Spirit of God stirring your heart toward love — but by a programmer in Silicon Valley working to steal your time and shape your behavior. “The choice is yours: rule or be ruled.” To live by a rule, of course, will require a crash course in learning to say no. Not just to sin, but to all sorts of things — good and bad. “I used to weigh high-potential behaviors with the question: Is this sinful or not? But now that I better understand the gospel and its possibility of life that is truly life with Jesus, my new question is: > Does this move me toward Jesus or away from Jesus?” That’s a far more interesting question. “The goal is to live with a kind of focus and intentionality and peacefulness that many admire and aspire to, but precious few attain.” Steve Jobs famously said he was as proud of what Apple had not done as what the company had done. He clarified: > “People think focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that are there.” “It’s the same with a rule. You have to pick carefully. You have to say no more than you say yes, because there are only so many hours in a day and so many days in a life. But hear me: a wisely chosen rule has the potential to enrich your life in ways you could not possibly imagine.” So we’ll end the reading there today and move into a few reflection questions. REFLECTION QUESTIONS 1. Have you ever taken a spiritual inventory of your life to see what kind of results you are experiencing? You may need to sit with the Lord on that one a bit. Maybe do a little journaling. I always say: get your journal out when we read through this book and ask these questions. 2. Are the current things you are doing in your life moving you closer to Jesus or further away from Him? Are the daily habits and routines in your life forming Christ in you — or distracting you from Him? And here’s a thought that jumped out at me based on this reading: We each have the ability, as free-will people created by God, to choose our rule of life. We can adjust the things we do or do not do to become the individual God created us to be. I’ll say that again. As free-will agents, each of us has the ability to choose what our rule of life will be — to adjust it, to do more positive things, to remove negative things, so we can become more of the individual God created us to be. And this line really struck me: > “A rule of life is an invitation to a very different definition of freedom than that of the modern world — an invitation to embrace the constraints that, if you give yourself to them, will eventually set you free.” Wow. Isn’t that amazing? I came up in the 70s when people started saying things like “free love” and “do whatever you want” and “if it feels good, do it.” And this says almost the exact opposite. Another saying I have on my desk right here is from Jocko Willink: > “Discipline equals freedom.” There’s something powerful about that. Because I think somewhere along the line, many of us started believing discipline was bondage when, in reality, wise discipline can actually lead us into freedom. Anyway, I’ll leave you with those thoughts today. And we will be back tomorrow with another reading as we continue further into this topic of A Rule of Life. God bless you all.

28. mai 202617 min