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The world tells you to climb, compete, and control. Jesus tells you the way up is down and he means it. Today on Field Notes, we sit in Matthew 5:1-2 and name the tension most of us feel when Scripture cuts across our default instincts. If you want to be great, culture says you claw your way to the top. Jesus flips that story and calls us to an upside-down kingdom where being last, serving quietly, and letting go of status is not loss but the way of the King.
We also challenge a feel-good line many of us have heard: “God will never give you a mountain you can’t climb.” It sounds hopeful, but it can train us to trust our own strength more than Christ. We look at how Scripture describes moments when believers are crushed beyond their ability, not to shame them, but to move them from self-sufficiency to dependence. Sometimes the mountain is impossible so we stop striving and start leaning fully on Jesus, the sovereign King who accomplishes what we never could.
Then we bring it home with a foundation check. Storms are coming, not maybe, but when. If we build on soft, shifting sand like popular beliefs, comfort, or whatever feels true today, life cracks under pressure. If we build on the rock-solid base of God’s Word, we stand even when the waves hit. Grab your Bible, read Matthew 5, and write down one area where your view needs to be flipped upside down. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
By Mission SentThe world tells you to climb, compete, and control. Jesus tells you the way up is down and he means it. Today on Field Notes, we sit in Matthew 5:1-2 and name the tension most of us feel when Scripture cuts across our default instincts. If you want to be great, culture says you claw your way to the top. Jesus flips that story and calls us to an upside-down kingdom where being last, serving quietly, and letting go of status is not loss but the way of the King.
We also challenge a feel-good line many of us have heard: “God will never give you a mountain you can’t climb.” It sounds hopeful, but it can train us to trust our own strength more than Christ. We look at how Scripture describes moments when believers are crushed beyond their ability, not to shame them, but to move them from self-sufficiency to dependence. Sometimes the mountain is impossible so we stop striving and start leaning fully on Jesus, the sovereign King who accomplishes what we never could.
Then we bring it home with a foundation check. Storms are coming, not maybe, but when. If we build on soft, shifting sand like popular beliefs, comfort, or whatever feels true today, life cracks under pressure. If we build on the rock-solid base of God’s Word, we stand even when the waves hit. Grab your Bible, read Matthew 5, and write down one area where your view needs to be flipped upside down. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.