Four days in and we’ve talked more about living in insignificance, than being significant. Rather than deepen feelings of insignificance, I hope our journey thus far has shed light on the craftiness of sin and opened our eyes to ways we may walk in insignificance.
If you’re just now joining us on this journey, then “Welcome!” You can see where we’ve been,
{day 1} Before Significance, There’s Insignificance
While insignificance makes us feel lacking, our hearts desire to be fully known, fully loved–yet safe.
But insignificance freezes us in fear and the truth of how God sees us is blurred.
Insignificance hinders free and full living in Christ, but the hope is freedom awaits.
{day 2} Defining Insignificance
Insignificance tells us we’re worthless.
It whispers condemnation and tells us no one cares.
We have great significance, but it’s rooted in Christ and not us.
Insignificance is a lie masked as truth. It’s deception in its truest form, because we’re convinced by its words.
We have lost intimacy with God, biblical courage, a vision of holiness, our eternal perspective.
But God has a better calling for us, one of hope and freedom.
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Over the next week, we’ll take a look at six different biblical figures and how they moved from insignificance to significance to walk in God’s calling and accomplish great things for His glory.
What have you learned about insignificance/significance?
Is there anything specific you’d like to see addressed?
Looking for the rest of the series? 31 Days of Significance











{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
I love this truth, “We have great significance, but it’s rooted in Christ and not us.” The significance we can claim is not because of us, who we are what we’ve done, it is all about claiming Christ and knowing His significance is ours because of us sacrifice.