Discouragement literally means leaving the heart, but it has one weakness: it cannot enter a heart where God already lives and refuses to leave.
It’s almost the end of the week.
And you’ve been carrying something that was never yours to carry.
Picture walking into a hidden shop where every shelf holds dangerous, gleaming instruments, each carefully priced.
Fear for $100.
Envy for $300.
Bitterness for $500.
Shoppers are buying them all.
But tucked behind a velvet curtain sits one tool more menacing than the rest.
Its blade is sharper than glass, more destructive than dynamite.
Its name? Discouragement.
And the name itself tells you everything.
It comes from the French cœur, meaning heart.
Literally, it means moving away from the heart.
Every time you “buy” discouragement, something leaves: your connection to the deepest part of who you are and who God made you to be.
Your heart is your power source.
And discouragement's only job is to cut the connection.
But it has a weakness.
Discouragement is powerless against a heart that knows God lives there.
Not just up there, but in here.
Right inside your own chest.
God knows what discouragement feels like.
And you reading this means the heart is still in the fight. You're further along than discouragement wants you to believe.
Here's your focus for this week:
When discouragement shows up again—and it will—remember this:
It can move a heart, but it cannot enter one where God already lives.
