
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Greatness is not destroyed by weakness.
It is destroyed by compromise.
In this episode, we confront the real enemies that sabotage calling, character, and covenant. We expose the quiet killers of destiny—pride, distraction, comparison, emotional immaturity, hidden sin, and the fear of being misunderstood.
We talk about why gifted people fall.
Why anointing does not equal discipline.
Why calling does not cancel crushing.
We unpack how Saul lost a kingdom while David gained one.
How Samson had strength but lacked restraint.
How Joseph endured obscurity before authority.
Greatness is not about platform.
It is about posture.
This conversation will challenge leaders, dreamers, and believers to examine the areas they excuse, the appetites they feed, and the disciplines they avoid. Because the enemy of greatness is rarely an external attack. It is often an internal agreement.
If you are serious about calling, this episode is for you.
Greatness is not given. It is stewarded.
And to clarify it was John the Baptist who ate the locusts
By Ikera and RjGreatness is not destroyed by weakness.
It is destroyed by compromise.
In this episode, we confront the real enemies that sabotage calling, character, and covenant. We expose the quiet killers of destiny—pride, distraction, comparison, emotional immaturity, hidden sin, and the fear of being misunderstood.
We talk about why gifted people fall.
Why anointing does not equal discipline.
Why calling does not cancel crushing.
We unpack how Saul lost a kingdom while David gained one.
How Samson had strength but lacked restraint.
How Joseph endured obscurity before authority.
Greatness is not about platform.
It is about posture.
This conversation will challenge leaders, dreamers, and believers to examine the areas they excuse, the appetites they feed, and the disciplines they avoid. Because the enemy of greatness is rarely an external attack. It is often an internal agreement.
If you are serious about calling, this episode is for you.
Greatness is not given. It is stewarded.
And to clarify it was John the Baptist who ate the locusts