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Before history remembers the victory, there is often a moment of quiet courage. A moment where no one sees the decision being made. No crowd. No applause. Just a choice between fear and obedience.
Ehud’s story reminds us that courage rarely begins in public. It begins in private, when a person decides to trust God enough to step forward.
Quiet courage is not loud. It is not dramatic. It is the steady resolve to act when the moment comes.
In Judges Reborn, these moments matter. Because long before the blade was drawn, courage had already taken root in the heart.
By Terry C DickersonBefore history remembers the victory, there is often a moment of quiet courage. A moment where no one sees the decision being made. No crowd. No applause. Just a choice between fear and obedience.
Ehud’s story reminds us that courage rarely begins in public. It begins in private, when a person decides to trust God enough to step forward.
Quiet courage is not loud. It is not dramatic. It is the steady resolve to act when the moment comes.
In Judges Reborn, these moments matter. Because long before the blade was drawn, courage had already taken root in the heart.