all devotionals

Who Do You Want to Be?

Before Jesus sent the disciples to do anything, He called them to be with Him. Identity comes before impact. Character sustains what skill builds.

You just introduced yourself at a networking event.
Name, company, title.

On the drive home, you thought,
Is that really who I am? Or just what I do?

Your job isn't who you are. It's what you do.

What you do will always flow from who you are.

That's the sequence that changes everything: BE → DO → HAVE.

Before the impact comes the identity.

Before the output comes the input.

This isn't a self-improvement formula. It's a discipleship one

The fact that you're asking "who do I want to be?" means you're already further along than most.
That shift in question is the beginning of the BE.

Here's your focus for today:

Be before you do. Spend time with Jesus before you spend time on your work today. Let identity precede activity.

Audit your doing. Write down your three biggest current pursuits. Next to each, ask: Is this flowing from who I am in God, or from who I'm trying to prove I am to others?

Build the character, not just the career. Identify one character quality you want to develop this week—patience, integrity, generosity. Name one specific situation today where you can practice it.

Anchor your day in this truth: "He appointed twelve that they might be with him and that he might send them out to preach" , Mark 3:14

Before Jesus sent anyone, He asked them to be with Him simply.

Start there.

Everything else flows from that one place.

This is some text inside of a div block.
sponsored by
This is some text inside of a div block.

More American Christian Articles

Playing the Long Game

Bold sacrifices today lead to eternal victories tomorrow. Play the long game—trust God’s unseen strategy and live for what lasts.

Letting Go To Truly Soar

Your greatest growth lies beyond comfort. Trust God, take the leap, and discover you were made to soar.

The Power of an Empty Chair

Leadership isn’t about recognition—it’s about serving others. The empty chair reminds us to create space for others to rise.

You’re Always Building Your Own House

You’re building your own house with every choice. Build it wisely, with integrity, so your future self will thank you.