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When God Redefines Success

Stop chasing a distant future to find peace; God offers contentment today. True wealth is measured by your soul's health, not by the world's metrics.

The sun was just beginning to hit the water.
A fisherman was sitting on the dock, not in a rush, just watching the line.

Beside him sat a small bucket with three silver fish.

They were enough for his lunch, and they were enough for his day.

A businessman stood nearby, checking his watch and tapping his phone.

He looked at the fisherman and saw a missed opportunity for growth.

"If you stayed out longer, you could catch twenty fish," the businessman said.

He laid out a twenty-year plan for boats, fleets, and international exports.

The fisherman looked up with a calm smile.

"And what happens after I make my millions?" he asked.

The businessman didn't hesitate:

"Then you can retire, move to a small village, and fish all morning with your family."

The fisherman nodded toward his small bucket.

"I already do that. Every afternoon," he replied quietly.

The ladder we're climbing matters less than where it's leaning.

Jesus asked a question that still cuts through every business plan and vision board:
"What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?" (Matthew 16:26)

He wasn't anti-ambition. He was anti-distraction.

The businessman wasn't wrong to dream.
He was wrong about the destination.
He'd convinced himself that success meant climbing higher.
But what he actually wanted was already waiting at ground level.

We do this too.

We tell ourselves we'll rest after the promotion.
Connect with family after the launch.
Pray consistently once things settle down. 

We're climbing hard, fast, rung after rung, without checking if the ladder is leaning against the right wall.

Enough isn't failure. Sometimes it's wisdom.

You don't have to wait for a retirement date to start living with intention.

God offers us a different kind of rhythm; one that values presence over performance.

He invites us to find the beauty in the small catch and the quiet morning.

This isn't about lowering your standards. It's about raising your awareness.

Today, take one minute today and ask:
What am I actually climbing toward?
Does this ladder get me there, or does it just keep me busy?

You might find that what you're working toward is already closer than you think.

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