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Closing the Gap Between Knowing and Doing

The gap between knowing and doing is where faithfulness is built. Show up with what you have and let God handle the rest.

You set the alarm for 5:30.
You hit snooze. Then again.
By the time you finally sit up, the morning is half gone.
And the guilt is already running ahead of you.

You know what you should be doing.
You just can't seem to make yourself do it.

That gap between knowing and doing is not a character flaw.
It's the exact place where faithfulness is built.
And the fact that you feel the tension means something in you is still reaching.

But reaching isn't enough on its own.
At some point, the hand has to grip.

The world tells you talent is the thing.
Find your gift, and everything else falls into place.
God's economy runs differently.
The parable of the talents wasn't a competition for who had the most.
It was a test of who showed up with what they were given.

Faithfulness looks boring from the outside.
It's the early morning before the house wakes up.
It's choosing your family over your phone at dinner.
It's doing the thing you said you would do, even when no one is watching.

You see, we tend to see discipline as a kind of punishment.
When in fact, it's the daily vote you cast for the person God is shaping you to become.

Your environment shapes you more than your willpower does.
So, put the Bible where you'll see it.
Remove the friction.
Build the structure that holds you up when motivation disappears, because it will disappear.

You don't need a new system.
You need a renewed reason.
When the goal is obedience, even the hard days carry weight.

Show up today. Then tomorrow.
The consistency you build now is what God uses later.

Here's your focus for today:

Own your morning: Wake before the noise begins and spend five quiet minutes setting your intention for the day.

Cut one distraction: Identify the single habit bleeding your time and remove it from today's environment.

Vote for tomorrow's version of you: Do one thing today your future self will be grateful for, even if it costs you comfort now.

Anchor your day in this truth: "Be very careful, then, how you live, not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil." (Ephesians 5:15-16)

The call is clear.
The day is yours to start doing.

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