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A vision can feel inspiring right up until it asks something from you. We start with Paul in Acts 20:22–24, heading toward Jerusalem with no promises of comfort, only a steady warning of chains and tribulation and still he says, “none of these things move me”, because he wants to finish his race with joy. That tension sets the stage for a deeper question: how do we follow Jesus with endurance when the path is costly and unclear?
We tell a real story of how abstract problems become personal when you see faces and names. Malawi is no longer “needs somewhere overseas” but people we’ve eaten with, prayed with, and grown to love. One well becomes a lifeline for thousands, and then the request comes for a second well, forcing an honest confession: we can’t easily say yes with limited resources and we also can’t say no. That is where purpose and mission stop being theory and start reshaping priorities, giving, and leadership.
From there we define what we call a “bleedable vision” and we draw a hard line between preference and conviction. Preference fades when it gets inconvenient; a surrendered calling stays when it gets resisted, when it costs more than expected, and when nobody claps. We share the long-haul cost of ministry through Celebrate Recovery and ask the questions that matter: What drives your decisions? What have you walked away from too easily? What matters to God that needs to matter to you?
If you’re hungry for Christian purpose, discipleship, leadership, and a faith that holds under pressure, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with your answer: what is one “yes” you know you need to give?
Support the show
www.Turning180.com
By jonathan althoffConnect with me here in text… tell me where you are listening.
A vision can feel inspiring right up until it asks something from you. We start with Paul in Acts 20:22–24, heading toward Jerusalem with no promises of comfort, only a steady warning of chains and tribulation and still he says, “none of these things move me”, because he wants to finish his race with joy. That tension sets the stage for a deeper question: how do we follow Jesus with endurance when the path is costly and unclear?
We tell a real story of how abstract problems become personal when you see faces and names. Malawi is no longer “needs somewhere overseas” but people we’ve eaten with, prayed with, and grown to love. One well becomes a lifeline for thousands, and then the request comes for a second well, forcing an honest confession: we can’t easily say yes with limited resources and we also can’t say no. That is where purpose and mission stop being theory and start reshaping priorities, giving, and leadership.
From there we define what we call a “bleedable vision” and we draw a hard line between preference and conviction. Preference fades when it gets inconvenient; a surrendered calling stays when it gets resisted, when it costs more than expected, and when nobody claps. We share the long-haul cost of ministry through Celebrate Recovery and ask the questions that matter: What drives your decisions? What have you walked away from too easily? What matters to God that needs to matter to you?
If you’re hungry for Christian purpose, discipleship, leadership, and a faith that holds under pressure, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with your answer: what is one “yes” you know you need to give?
Support the show
www.Turning180.com