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What if brotherhood forged in risk is the missing key to vibrant faith and real leadership? We open with an exploration of 2 Samuel 23—David’s Mighty Men—and why their grit, loyalty, and costly devotion still speak to church life today. This isn’t a call to cosplay toughness; it’s a call to purpose. We talk about hands stuck to swords, raids for a cup of water, and the kind of character that inspires people to risk big and worship bigger.
We also tackle the thorny question of alliances. Can we partner on mission with people who don’t share all our beliefs? We say yes—with discernment. The kingdom advances when we stop confusing disagreement with enmity, and when we recognize allies without surrendering convictions. From community cleanups to school-board courage, we highlight how collaboration can serve the common good while staying rooted in biblical truth. Along the way, we rethink how “unequally yoked” gets misapplied and offer a better path toward mission-first unity.
Iron sharpening iron gets practical here. Sharpening needs difference—temper, shape, and tool. Real growth comes when diverse strengths refine us, not when clones affirm us. That’s why inner circles matter: trust is forged in risk, not in talk. We argue that to be Christian is to be a leader by default, because discipling is influence. And we reclaim a robust vision of masculinity: acquainted with violence yet governed by restraint, strong enough to act and humble enough to worship. The rallying cry is simple—“Not on my watch.” When darkness presses the gate, we stand shoulder to shoulder for the King.
https://wofoyo.org/ #wofoyo
By C-Dub and BonesWhat if brotherhood forged in risk is the missing key to vibrant faith and real leadership? We open with an exploration of 2 Samuel 23—David’s Mighty Men—and why their grit, loyalty, and costly devotion still speak to church life today. This isn’t a call to cosplay toughness; it’s a call to purpose. We talk about hands stuck to swords, raids for a cup of water, and the kind of character that inspires people to risk big and worship bigger.
We also tackle the thorny question of alliances. Can we partner on mission with people who don’t share all our beliefs? We say yes—with discernment. The kingdom advances when we stop confusing disagreement with enmity, and when we recognize allies without surrendering convictions. From community cleanups to school-board courage, we highlight how collaboration can serve the common good while staying rooted in biblical truth. Along the way, we rethink how “unequally yoked” gets misapplied and offer a better path toward mission-first unity.
Iron sharpening iron gets practical here. Sharpening needs difference—temper, shape, and tool. Real growth comes when diverse strengths refine us, not when clones affirm us. That’s why inner circles matter: trust is forged in risk, not in talk. We argue that to be Christian is to be a leader by default, because discipling is influence. And we reclaim a robust vision of masculinity: acquainted with violence yet governed by restraint, strong enough to act and humble enough to worship. The rallying cry is simple—“Not on my watch.” When darkness presses the gate, we stand shoulder to shoulder for the King.
https://wofoyo.org/ #wofoyo