The Nick Bare Podcast - 174: What Your God-Given Assignment Will Cost You | Noah Herrin
Episode Date: May 18, 2026In this episode, I sit down with Pastor Noah Herrin of Way Church of Nashville, TN, to talk about faith, obedience, and what it means to stay close to Jesus in every season. We unpack church planting,... grace, biblical conviction, disappointment, healing, and the difference between chasing your own opportunities and stepping fully into the assignment God has placed in front of you.CHAPTERS:00:00 Intro02:40 What God Is Building at Way Church07:09 Commitment to the Craft of Faith10:43 How to Keep the Fire Alive17:19 What Saturday Teaches Us About Easter25:43 Faith, Grace, and the Work That Follows33:07 The Challenge Facing Young Believers34:17 Why Biblical Literacy Matters43:11 A Simple Way to Read Scripture50:08 Stewarding What God Entrusted56:34 Do You Want to Be Healed?57:24 Theo Von, Faith, and Honest Questions01:04:15 New Wine Requires a New Life01:07:42 Assignments Over Opportunities01:10:28 How to Recognize Your Assignment01:15:55 Taking Big Swings for God01:19:11 Final Gratitude and Closing ThoughtsORDER MY BOOK HERE: https://www.amazon.com/Go-One-More-Intentional-Life-Changing/dp/1637746210FOLLOW:Become a BPN member FOR FREE - Unlock 25% off FOR LIFE https://www.bareperformancenutrition.com/collections/performance-nutritionIG: instagram.com/nickbarefitness/YT: youtube.com/@nickbarefitnessThis podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal [health or profession] advice. Bare Performance Nutrition (BPN) is not responsible for any losses, damages, or liabilities that may arise from the use of this podcast. This podcast is not intended to replace professional medical advice.This podcast may not be republished without the written consent of Bare Performance Nutrition (BPN)
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Pastor Noah Heron of Wade Church in Nashville, Tennessee.
What's up, brother?
What's up, man?
Honor to be here.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for having me.
How about that dinner last night?
I'm still basking in the glory, you might say.
I was pretty happy with the decision to go for sushi.
Yeah.
As I was preparing for this podcast, you know, we decided on sushi weeks ago.
go. I made the reservation. It's currently
Stefan I's favorite sushi spot in Austin, Uchiko. And I was on your
website just going through some stuff. And your blurb
says one of your favorite things to do is finding the best sushi spot
in Nashville. For sure. I was like, oh, we're good. Locked in. We're good.
I was very excited about the sushi spot because
for those of you listening, it was planned six weeks ago. And when Nick was
like, hey, let's have you on the podcast. We'll go eat dinner. He literally said, I just made a
reservation here and sent the spot. It's pretty rare for me to reserve a spot at a restaurant six
weeks out. So I knew, like, you've been thinking about this meal for six weeks. Oh, yeah. And it did
not disappoint. It was absolutely incredible. I think we had every single type of nagiri on the
menu is amazing. Well, ordering sushi for me is such an experience. Yeah. Like, growing up,
I'm from a small town in central Pennsylvania.
We had one sushi spot, which was in the town next to us.
It was called wasabi.
Wow.
And we would go get sushi once a year.
Yeah, special.
We had it was special and we'd order like chicken terriaki.
Yeah.
And maybe like a California roll.
Yeah.
And then as I got older, I was introduced to all you can eat sushi and more advanced
rules and then nagiri.
Yep.
So when Steph and I go for for for sushi, it's, you know, it's a few rules.
Sure.
But I'll look at the menu and I don't even know what I'm ordering like three of these, nine of these, 12 of those.
And then I'm hoping like we ordered the right amount.
Yeah.
Because regardless, whatever gets put on the table, we're throwing it back.
We're in.
Yeah.
And Steph goes one for one with me.
She went, we all went one for one last night.
Yeah.
Pretty much for the most part.
Totally.
And it fueled our run this morning.
It was fantastic.
Are sauna and plunge. It's been a great. It's been a great 24 hours. Last couple, yeah, last couple days together. For sure. But I really appreciate you making the time. Absolutely, man. And come on the podcast. Steph and I had the amazing opportunity to visit Way Church a few months ago when we were in Nashville and love what you guys are doing. Thank you, ma'am. I mean, the worship was powerful and so intentional. I know you guys are expanding and building something absolutely amazing.
and I really enjoy your sermons, your messages.
Thank you.
To be able to witness it in person was great,
but I also keep up with your podcast.
I keep up with your sermons on iTunes.
I listen to them all the time because they're so clear,
there's no fluff, they're scripture-based,
and there's always for me a very clear takeaway
that wakes me up in the moment of where I am.
And that's typically a morning run, log in five to eight miles.
Yeah.
Well, thank you, man.
That means a lot.
It's cool what God's doing for sure.
It's when we moved to Nashville, we were expecting.
Like, we weren't going to pick up our family and move somewhere,
thinking that we were going to be a part of something that God wasn't in.
And anytime God's in it, I really believe that he wants it to be something that we have to depend on him to do.
Like, I don't think God's ever going to call you to something.
that you don't need him for. And with that, I think oftentimes it's stuff that's bigger than you.
Like, it's stuff that we have this phrase at our church called Only God. Like, we want to live lives.
Only God could get the credit for. And so when we moved to Nashville, we were very much of that
mindset of like, we know God's called us. We know that this is going to make an impact. But what
has happened the first two and a half years of our church is blown our minds. Like, just truly,
like there's no way that a person or a group of people could get the credit for what God's doing.
It is truly the Lord that is doing something in Nashville right now.
And yeah, it was super cool for you guys to come.
I think you guys came on, it was like the Sunday that we did, the Christmas thing with the kids,
which is always my favorite Sunday.
You just never know what's going to happen.
You kind of alluded to this last night at dinner, but I didn't pry on it.
And I'm curious now, you said it was kind of,
interesting story of how you got to Nashville. Yeah. Where were you before Nashville? Yeah.
And then why Nashville? So we were in Atlanta for about two years leading up to Nashville.
I served on my dad's church, on my dad's staff at his church. And we're there for two years.
I kind of did full-time traveling ministry. So I actually preached a hundred different places
in the last year before we moved to Nashville. It was like way too much travel, but this was pre-kid.
And Maddie would go on a lot of them with me.
And it's fun.
It was so fun.
It was so fun.
Different cities, different churches.
And we actually were exposed to so many different great pastors and great churches that
we were inspired by.
And we would go, oh, man, we really like the way that they run their staff meeting.
Or we really like the way that they structured their service or the way he preaches.
And we were just constantly, like, all these data points of like, this is what we want to,
we want to start in Nashville.
And we felt like we were called to plan of church.
I felt like I was called the planted church.
That means start a church, by the way.
One time I told someone I was a church planter,
and they thought I did church landscaping.
So I have that preface it.
But when I was 21 years old,
I was being disciples by a church planter.
And it didn't make any sense to me.
I was like, why did you start a church?
That sounds like the riskiest.
Like, you could just go work at a church.
Like, why would you do this?
And he said that he felt like church planters
were kind of like the Navy
Seals of the Kingdom of God that you just jump out of an airplane and hope you hit a bird. And the moment
he said that, I remember with this little Starbucks in Cleveland, Tennessee, there was like something
in my heart that was like, I like that. Like, I want to be like that. Like I want to have the kind of
faith to jump out of an airplane and hope that Jesus takes over. And so we felt that early on. And
ultimately, Nashville, it came down to, we got some advice from a mentor. He said,
plant in the city that you love the most. Because when the ministry gets hard, you won't be tempted to leave.
And so when he said that, we had already fallen in love with Nashville.
Maddie, my wife looked at me and she was like, we're moving to Nashville.
And we moved about six months after that.
Oh, wow.
So.
It's funny you bring up Navy SEALs.
Yeah.
I recently had DJ Shipley on the podcast.
Tier 1 operator.
He was a Navy SEAL and then spent time with Dev Gru.
Wow.
Just an impressive operator.
Now, I asked him the question, what separates tier one operators from the rest of the conventional military?
Sure.
And he said, commitment to the craft.
Wow.
And if you think about what it takes to plant a church and be a pastor and held to this higher standard,
it requires commitment to the craft, commitment to the skill.
commitment to the word, commitment to the relationship with Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
And without it, you cannot be a tier one operator, a tier one pastor, a follower, a teacher,
a believer.
Yeah, absolutely, man.
I think for being a pastor, it's like the thing, if there was like a one thing,
are you familiar with the concept of the one thing?
Like the book?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes.
Okay.
So.
It's been a while since I've read the one thing.
Yeah, it was like, I should reread that actually.
It was pretty revolutionary for me when I picked it up in my early 20s of like, I didn't know what my one thing was. I didn't know what I wanted it to be. But basically for people who are listening who aren't familiar with the book, there's like one thing that you could do every single day that moves the needle for whatever you do the most, right? Whether it's spiritually or professionally, you kind of like strip down reverse engineer your goals down to the one thing you can do every day that moves the needle. And when I first got in the ministry,
I thought the thing that would move the needle was my knowledge about the Bible, my knowledge about the word, which is so important. Like, I'm not saying that it's not. But the longer that I'm in the game, the longer that I'm pastoring, I really think the one thing is what can I do today to follow a little bit more in love with Jesus? And that is the one thing, because I actually think the greatest thing a pastor or a dad or a business leader can give,
to their family, their church, their business is actually their relationship with Jesus.
Like that's the most powerful thing you can give your people is when you're around them
and you're the same person on the microphone that you are in the lobby.
Or you're the same person in the board meeting that you are in the gym.
I think people see that and they go, I want to be like that.
What do they have?
It reminds me of this scripture in Proverbs.
It says that those who refresh others will they themselves be refreshed.
And it's like when you're around someone who's really in love with Jesus, you just are like so refreshed by them that you then want to go refresh others and you want to be someone that is refreshing like them. And so it's been a it's been like a real like mindset shift for me of like some days the thing that I do that does make me fall the most in love with Jesus is read the word. And then some days the thing that made me fall more in love with Jesus was going on a walk with no music with with with no agenda other than to just listen to the Lord. Some days it's like.
listen into a sermon. Some days listen to this podcast and being like, wow, like hearing Nick and
Steph's story just encourage me so much in my relationship with the Lord. And it's like when you're
falling in love with Jesus, the rest of it falls in place. That's right. Why do you think people
sometimes fall out of love with Jesus? And I think in many things we do in life, you discover this new
thing. Yeah. Maybe that's a hobby. Yeah. Maybe that's
It's like a newfound passion or a new skill.
Maybe it's being saved by Christ.
And there's this fire.
And I don't want to say the fire burns out.
Yeah.
But it goes from being this like wild fire to then being a steady,
maintainable, sustainable fire.
Totally.
But then some people's fire burns out.
Yep.
They give up on the sport.
Yep.
They give up on the hobby.
Yep.
They give up on following.
Yep.
when it comes to following Christ, why do people fall out of love?
Yeah.
It's actually, it reminds me of the book of Revelation.
There's this critique of churches from Jesus.
And he critiques this one church and he says, you fell out of love.
Like, you lost your first love.
It's his critique and the first love being him.
And I really think what you see is like a lot of times a new believer, they have the most
passion out of anyone in the church they go to.
Like they respond to every altar call.
If there's an altar call, they're the ones that,
are in the front row. They're the ones that are amening. They're journaling. They're in the small
group. And a lot of times the people who've been following Jesus the longest are the opposite.
They're kind of like, if we're just being honest, they're the most rude, you know? And I really
think there's two main things. I think the first one is I'm convinced that passion following Jesus
is directly tied with how often you remember what he did for you. So those people who just
gave their life to Jesus, they've had a fresh taste of the grace of God. And they are just, I cannot
believe what Jesus did for me. I cannot believe that he would die on a cross for my sins and pay the
penalty of death for me. And then you followed Jesus for 20 years and you've heard the message of grace.
You've heard the cross. You've heard every sermon under the sun. And you just kind of take it for
grant it a little bit more. You get used to it a little bit more. And I think that that is like
something that we all have to push back on and we just have to constantly remind ourselves of how good
Jesus is. The other part of it, and I think this one is really, it was revolutionary for my
relationship with Jesus is I think a lot of us, what we do is we focus on our love for God.
So we're like, if I could just love God more today, that's how I'm going to stay on fire for God,
is loving him more. But our love is so inconsistent. I mean, like, like, even those of us who are,
like, the most disciplined and we try really hard to love God, our love eventually false. Like, it
falters. It's flaky. It's inconsistent. Conditional. It's conditional. Absolutely. And it's not a good
foundation for you to build your life on your love for God. It matters. But a much more solid
foundation is to build your life on God's love for you because it's unconditional. It never fails.
It's strong every single day. It's not dependent on performance. It's not dependent on my past.
It's dependent on the fact that God's heart is for me. And so what I've been trying to do for the last
five years is to remind myself and to learn more about God's love for me. Because inevitably,
what happens is the more I learn about God's love for me, the more I love him. And the more I learn
about God's love for me, the more I want to do the things that God wired me to do and created me to do.
Like my obedience to the Lord, my faithfulness to the Lord comes out of a place of me just naturally
wanting to do it versus like, I've got to do this thing because this is what the Bible says.
Yeah.
It's like, I want to do this thing because I love God back.
Does that make sense?
It makes sense.
On your first point of what we constantly need this reminder of the sacrifice that Jesus made for us,
I felt that reignition of fire, not to say that my fire burnt out, but when I was initially saved,
I mean, the whole house was in flames.
In a good way.
In a great way.
Yeah.
In the best way possible.
Yeah.
And then it became this steady burn after that.
And I settled into this new life and it's like, okay, I got to have some endurance.
As we were talking about previously, there's no finish lines to this journey.
And for much of my life, I have approached it as here's the milestone you need to get to.
Here's the finish line and you get to.
This is different.
This is an ever-evolving, growing, learning relationship and journey.
but come Easter
this Easter felt very different
than any Easter before
where I felt the
sacrifice that
Jesus made for us
and it was a very heavy Easter
and this
re-ignition of the fire
was kickstarted and relit again
and it's like man
he died for us
of like this brutal death, this crucifixion.
And it was, as you were explaining that,
I kept thinking back to what I felt Easter morning
was like the same thing I felt when I was initially saved.
So finding ways to remember,
we remind ourselves, this is why we follow him.
This is the sacrifice he made for us.
It is not to be taken lately.
Nope.
And it can't just become, like,
like part of the norm.
Yeah.
I was listening to a podcast Easter morning.
That was kind of explaining this.
And it's really easy.
I mean, I did for much of my life.
Easter's just another holiday.
Yeah.
And yeah, Jesus rose.
Yeah.
And it's like this bubbly, happy conversation and talk.
But like there's a lot of deep pain and saccharacterial.
rooted in that.
For sure.
To recognize and respect that, I think it's really important.
Absolutely, man.
It's a crazy story.
And every time we get to Easter, like, I think about, I think really hard about, like,
Saturday in the Easter story of, like, Saturday is the day that gets skipped often when
we talk about Easter.
Like, 2,000 years ago, Saturday was a horrible day.
It was, like, the day that all the people who did believe in Jesus were, like, wait, he's
still dead.
like this guy that we picked up and followed and sold everything to follow and gave up our old life to follow
and thought he was going to set us free to follow. He's in a grave like every other person. It was like a
real day of disappointment. And I actually am so encouraged by Saturday because there was a time
when this picture of Christianity was painted for me of like puppies and rainbows kind of,
you know, it's like everything's just always going to work out exactly how it's supposed to. And there's
going to be no trouble. And that's clearly not the story that we see in the Bible. And it's actually
really encouraged me in times where things aren't going well. And I am discouraged. And it feels
like the timeline doesn't match my expectations to just be reminded that even on Saturday in my
disappointment, God is still working. Like God still has the final say. And often, man, it's like
in those seasons of disappointment is actually where I've,
grown the closest to the Lord. It's like when I've gotten to know him in a way that was much deeper
than in the mountaintop season where everything was going great. It was like I almost needed a season
where everything was dark for me to just be like, man, I don't have another option but to run to the
Lord and I hope that he can handle this mess in every single time he has. And that makes Easter
so much more special to me is that it's not just a story.
of Jesus rising from the dead,
but it's this story of Jesus ultimately proving
that he always does have the final say,
even on the other side of disappointment.
Yes.
Something I've been thinking on recently,
I was having this conversation with a mentor this past week,
was about appreciating this storm that you're in.
And the conversation we were having,
was in reference to the gospel.
After Jesus fed the 5,000,
and they got in the boat and there was a storm.
And the disciples were asking Jesus to stop the storm.
And I often find myself, if I think about the last decade of my life,
I've been in a storm for the last decade of building a business
and being an entrepreneur and building anything,
you're just constantly, you're battling,
battles and fights and blocking and tackling on a daily basis.
And as my mentor and I were having this conversation,
he was challenging me to really appreciate the storm that I'm in
because this storm is shaping me.
God might be using this storm to shape me the person he wants me to be.
And we were kind of talking about this at dinner last night,
and you brought up a proverb, and it really resonated with me last night.
and as I woke up this morning
I went and re-read it
and just sat with it for a while
and it was Proverbs 144
where there are no oxen
the manger is empty
but from the strength of an ox
come abundant harvests
and I sat with this for a while
and I'd love for you to kind of break down
and explain it
but my interpretation is
if we apply it to our life
we want comfort, we want cleanliness, we don't want the mess of our environment or other people
or relationships. And that sounds great. But when we have that, there's emptiness. That's right.
We need the hardship. We need the discomfort. We need the relationship management. And to be
challenged and pushed to have abundant harvests. That's right. And I'll sharing this with
one of, uh, with the entire creative team this morning. And the question I was asked, and I
know how to respond. I'm curious your, uh, thoughts on this. What are the abundant harvests
that we are getting in the context of this scripture? It's great, man. Um, it's one of my
favorite scriptures, because like you said, we would all prefer the cleaner route. We'd all prefer
no friction, we'd all prefer things to just go up and to the right and whatever area of life
we're talking about. When I read that scripture, I'm reminded, I can have impact or I can have
no friction, but I can't have both. So the context that I think of is mostly relational when it
comes to that verse. I think about the oxen as people, no offense people. Oxen are great animals.
They do great things. But that's what I'm thinking of is like so much
of the mess of life comes from us being in relationship with other broken people like us.
And so when we're in those relationships, it can feel like, man, like this is a really hard
conversation I'm having to have today with a coworker or this is a really difficult season
that my friend is going through that I feel like I'm supposed to walk with them through this,
but man, this is a mess and this is added stress and tension to my life and it has nothing to do
with me, but I feel like I'm supposed to go through this. It feels messy and you can either
remove yourself from that. But if you do that, you also remove yourself from the opportunity to
impact their life to plant seeds that might bloom immediately. They might bloom 10 years later.
They might bloom long after you're in relationship with that person. One of my favorite scriptures
is Galatian 6.9. It says, don't grow weary of doing good. For at the proper time, you'll reap a harvest
if you don't give up. What I love about that scripture is like, we've got one job.
which is to not give up.
And then all of the other results are up to the Lord.
It's like the actual fruit.
I've been thinking about John 15 this week,
which is Jesus when he says that he's divine and we're the branches.
And his command is just remain in me and you will bear much fruit.
And the thing about a branch is it never has to strive to be a branch.
It just stays connected to Jesus.
just stays connected to Jesus. It just stays investing in people. And the fruit happens naturally because of that.
So fruit could be, hey, there's someone on my team or there's someone that works for me or I work for that I'm just consistently like a person who encourages them. I'm just consistently in their mess with them. When they have hard days, they tend to come to me to talk to me. I try to encourage them. Whatever it is, maybe they don't have a relationship with Jesus right now, but maybe five years from now when their life hits rock bottom, they remember who the rock at the bottom of your life was. And they go, hey, Nick,
Dude, I'm struggling.
And every time I've ever struggled in the past with smaller things, you always had this
piece about you.
Can you tell me where you got that?
And then boom, gospel opportunity.
You know, fruit from years of messy stable, you know, messy situations, hard conversations.
Or maybe it's sooner than that.
You know, maybe it's they already follow Jesus.
But it's like you're getting in the mess with them and they're realizing, man, I actually
followed religion.
I didn't have a relationship with Jesus.
I was just doing things
because I thought I was supposed to do it.
But as followers of Jesus,
we have this crazy thing.
There's no other religion like this
where we're immediately saved
and then also immediately called.
So we're immediately saved.
And then Jesus is like,
okay, now I'm going to turn you
into a fissure of men.
Go and help other people find me.
And that's what I think about
with that scripture is like,
that's messy work going.
and sharing the gospel and encouraging people.
I wanted to touch on this later in the conversation,
but this feels like a good time.
You know, we know Ephesians 2, 8 through 9
that we are saved through faith.
For it is by grace, you have been saved through faith.
And this is not from ourselves.
It is a gift of God, not by works,
so that no one can boast.
So when you read and hear something like,
this. It's not by our works.
Yeah. It is
by grace, you've been saved
through faith.
Yep. But then, on
the contrary, you read something like James
217, faith
by itself, if not accompanied
by action, is dead.
Totally. So how do you respond
to, this is the one faith.
This is the one religion. Yeah.
Where we are saved,
it is by grace, you are saved through
faith. Yeah. But it is not
mean that faith by itself, if not accompanied by action, is dead.
Yeah.
How do you respond to that?
So I think it's really about the order.
And I think both are actually absolutely true.
It kind of goes back to what we were saying a few minutes ago about falling in love with Jesus.
So the best way I know how to describe this is when Maddie and I got married, I didn't do any chores
around the house because I just, I don't know what I was thinking.
I wasn't thinking. That's what was happening. And one day I came home from work and she was extremely
upset with me. She was like, I asked you to do the laundry last night. You did not do the laundry. You haven't
done any laundry since we got married. I mean, she was letting me have it and I deserved it. I was just
very late. I watched sports when I came home from work and I did nothing. And so she, the next day,
she was gone for like three or four hours and I thought, I am going to do every single piece of laundry in this
house. And what I did is I, I, like, left all of it folded on the bed so that she could see that I had done it.
And so dumb. And when she came home, she had never, in our entire relationship, been so excited about what
she saw. Like, she started trying to kiss me. I mean, it was like, I was like, you need me to vacuum?
Like, what else do you need, you know? But I learned in that moment that great relationships require
effort, that if you want to have a relationship that actually thrives, you can't just be like,
well, I hope that this gets better and then you don't put effort into the relationship.
And what I think about those two scriptures is our relationship with Jesus can only start
because of what he did for us. It is only started by our faith and belief that he actually is
God, that he actually did die on the cross, that he actually did raise from the dead,
and that it counted for us.
Like, that is the only way
you can begin a relationship with Jesus.
But because you love him,
you naturally want to put an effort
into the relationship.
You naturally want to get to know him.
And the more you get to know him,
the more you get to know him,
the more you're going to start doing the things
that he wired you and called you to do.
And so this, like, James is,
I love the book of James.
It's like one of the most, like,
hard-nosed, like, this direct-to-the-point.
I love the books of the Bible.
It's amazing.
And I love it.
it because it's a reminder that this journey of following Jesus, I really think the audience he was
speaking to is not dissimilar to American Christianity, which has slipped into a little bit of
how can, it slipped into a little bit of what can I get out of following Jesus versus
here's everything that I have Jesus. You're the Lord of my life. And I really think what he's
saying is like, hey, like, you're just making this all about you. It's time. It's
to get some skin in the game here.
Like you call yourself a follower of Jesus.
Like do the things that he did.
Like following his footsteps.
Like you say you're a follower, but you just,
you're just, you look like you did before you accepted Christ.
Yeah.
So that's good.
Dude, it makes me think of, uh,
Steph's birthdays.
Hmm.
Steph is a big, like, holiday,
okay.
Birthday,
make a moment.
Yeah.
experience. Lots of balloons. Yes, like balloons, cards. And I have historically, for our entire
relationship, failed. All she's ever wanted is flowers and a card. Yeah. And I'll be very honest,
like, I have failed many times. I've gotten caught up in my life and work, in my training,
and it's 11 p.m. the night before the big day. And I'm like, crap.
I did it again.
I did it again.
So I'll go like make something on the computer or like I'll make a custom card,
which is like a piece of paper folded over and I'll write some stuff on it.
Custom does make it sound better.
It does, it does, but she knows.
I forgot.
Not even that I forgot, I just didn't care enough.
Yeah.
And I hate to say that, but it's the truth.
So her birthday was three weeks ago.
Okay.
And I was like, I'm doing it big this year.
I'm making up for
Like this is the new standard
Yeah
I did it all dude
I got one of those companies
Coming to the
Sign in your yard
Oh yeah
It's like happy birthday Steph
She's into tennis right now
So there's a tennis ball on it
Go on I got flowers delivered
I got custom cupcakes done
Wow
I took the day off of work
I got her birthday present
We went into Austin
We went into the spa
she's been craving
like a chicken Caesar wrap
so I found the best chicken Caesar rap spot
in Austin I could find
we went to this natural regenerative
butcher in grocery shop
afterwards got coffee
she wanted homemade burgers and fries
for dinner I did that
I did it all did and
she was so happy
wow not the
not because of like
what I got her
and it was the thought
it was the intention
it was the works.
Yeah.
Like she knows I love her.
Yeah.
But it was the action that I took.
Yep.
That, like, reinforced the love that I have for.
Yeah, man.
And that was an eye-opener for me because I watched how it just, like, it made her feel.
Like, man, I could have, I could have been doing this for a long time.
Yeah.
And I didn't because I relied on the fact that we got married.
I'm committed.
We're already good.
We're good.
We're in our ring.
what else do we need?
Right.
And I was so wrong.
But I resonate with that.
Yeah.
And the way that it aligns with faith and works and deeds makes so much sense.
Yeah.
It's faith first.
If you try to do works first, there's no relationship with God.
Your works can't earn it.
Like, it doesn't matter what your spiritual pedigree is, who your dad is, who your mom is, how much money you've made.
It just doesn't matter.
It's like you got faith is first.
And then once we realize that it's his works that did it, not ours,
then we naturally want to do things that he's called us to do.
Yeah.
I'm curious, you know, running a church in Nashville, Tennessee,
which, I mean, as a whole, you know, we spent a nine-month sabbatical in Nashville.
Yeah.
In 2003.
I like that, nine-month sabbatical.
the people in that area, it's different.
You know, Steph and I were in, we were visiting in Franklin a few months ago.
We were in a coffee shop.
And there was like this group of mid-20-year-old girls that came in.
Yeah.
And they were dressed very southern proper.
They were all carrying their Bibles.
Wow, this is like really awesome to see.
Yeah.
especially when you compare two parts of Austin, Texas.
Sure.
Just being very honest.
But Way Church has a younger audience demographic.
We do.
What problems do you see that the younger population is struggling with when it comes to their faith and their relationship with Christ?
Yeah.
I think...
Or the world.
It's, I would say the biggest one.
And it's so encouraging that you saw,
those girls carrying their Bible around because I would actually say that the biggest issue with
younger Christians is biblical literacy, meaning that they don't always know what the Bible actually says.
And the reason that that's really dangerous is because there are so many things,
whether on social media or conversations that you're having with people, that people can say
that sound really, really good and valiant and loving, that are actually super.
contradictory to what the Bible says. I have a mentor who told me 10 years ago. He said, Noah,
one, there's coming a day where people are going to set aside the Bible in an attempt to become more
like Jesus. And what he was saying is, like there are going to be things that people think
Jesus would do or Jesus would say because they sound like the most loving thing that you could do.
and because they don't actually know what Jesus said and did 2,000 years ago,
they're just going to do that thing that sounds loving and intolerant and good now.
And they're going to miss who the real Jesus was.
Because if you're building your life on a Jesus that's not from scripture,
you can call them whatever you want, but it's not Jesus.
And that's the danger that I see with young people is whenever the word is not the foundation
of who Jesus is in your life.
You'll fill that foundation with feelings.
You'll fill it with whatever culture is filling it with.
And you'll have this kind of mutt Jesus
that has some stuff that's accurate
and some stuff that's not.
But ultimately, you're going to end up in a place
that is not the place that God wants you
because your truth is not coming from the word.
The way that I say it to our church all the time
is that if Jesus said it 2,000 years ago,
he would say the same thing today because the Bible tells us that he's the same yesterday, today,
and forever. So if he was for it 2,000 years ago, he'll be for it now. If he's against it
two thousand years ago, he'd be against it now. And a lot of young people, when talking about
the things that Jesus is against, they get super uncomfortable. Like, well, why would he be against
that? Well, why would he not want me to have that? Why would he say no to that? And what I'm trying to teach
our church is that anytime Jesus says no in scripture, it's always because he has a better yes.
It's because the designer always knows how the designed works best. And so we have to like,
I really think lean in with the next generation of like, this is what the Bible says. This is why it says it.
And ultimately, this is why it's for your good. And if we don't do that, I think what we're going to see is just this continuation of a
Jesus mixed with culture. That is not actually who Jesus is. Do you have any examples of that?
Yeah, I think sexuality is like the one that's like, it's like really, um, it's really prominent right now.
So like, just an example would be a couple who comes to church and they're sleeping together,
you know, they're living together. But they're not married. But they're not married and they don't,
they don't see any, uh, any problem with it. They're like, I love her. She loves me and, uh,
we're going to get married one day. Like, what's the big deal? And,
it's like, okay, well, first of all, like, all throughout scripture, we see that God's design for sex is in the context of marriage.
And like, ah, but like, that means that I've got to, like, move out and, like, she's going to have to find her own spot and she's going to have to pay for that.
And, like, that doesn't feel like a win.
That doesn't feel like, like Jesus would want us to have to pay twice the amount of money.
And it's like, well, the whole reason Jesus said this is because a lot of people who are doing what you're doing, this doesn't end in marriage.
this doesn't end in sacrificial love for each other.
Like there's a reason why sex was held out to the end
because a lot of times the moment you start getting that,
you stop serving the other person in the way that you should.
But like in the short term, it's just like,
well, you're going to make us like completely upend our life?
Like, that sounds so hateful.
And it's like, actually it's the most loving thing
that the Lord could do is cause you to move out.
And it's one of the reasons I tell people like,
I'm four quick engagements.
Like if you know that you love them, like get married.
Like jump, like don't wait.
Like just go all in.
But that's like a pretty practical, common example that I think we see a lot.
Have you had anyone at the church who came to way, they weren't married, they were living together, they were sleeping together?
And then they were realizing that they made a mistake, like went, went backwards?
Yeah.
So we had a couple that was invited to a small group.
They were living together.
They'd been dating for about a year.
And they just genuinely had no idea that it was a sin.
Like they didn't grow up in church.
So they gave them.
That's all Steph and I were.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We moved in together before we were engaged.
Yeah.
And we didn't know.
Yeah.
A lot of people don't.
And it's like,
the Lord has so much grace for that.
You know, like I remember this couple in particular,
they actually both gave their life to Jesus at our church.
So they're like, they're like passion.
it like we're talking about. Like all this passion, just clueless about like anything the Bible says.
They're just like, Jesus died for my sins. I have eternal life. This is amazing. And they start going
to this small group. And this was like right at the beginning of the church. So we only had eight small
groups at the time. Now we have like, I don't even know how many. But I went to one of them.
And I meet this couple. And they're asking like the most elementary Christian questions.
And I think a lot of times people are like, oh, like they should know better.
But people who have real spiritual maturity when they're around people that are in sin like that and asking questions like that, it's the most encouraging thing.
Because it's like, what better place for someone who's new to their faith, who doesn't know what the Bible says to be asking those questions than around other Christians who are also trying to follow Jesus and live a life that's submitted to him?
What ended up happening is about three months after they started coming to small groups.
They moved out. They got their own places because they realized like this isn't what the Lord has for us.
And they actually ended up breaking up. Oh, like six months later. And one of them is now engaged to another girl because it's been like a year and a half now.
And the other one is dating someone else. Both are in healthy like holy relationships that are honoring the Lord.
and the guy is the one that I'm the closest to naturally. And he talks about how life changing. He was like,
I really think what would have happened between the two of us is we would have gotten married
because we were so comfortable living together and so comfortable sharing what we were sharing.
I think we would have gotten married and I don't think that we were supposed to get married.
And we just couldn't see that when we were living together. And it's like, so sometimes it ends up
working out like really good. Sometimes the relationship ends up ending. But it's like,
You can't argue with the results now of their life because they both are like, we're so thankful that we moved out.
Yeah.
I think what happens with some people, couples sometimes is like say you start dating.
Yeah.
And then you move in together.
Yeah.
And then his becomes hers and hers becomes his.
Right.
Before they commit to each other and decide to get married.
But here you are now in this situation where you're living together.
you're not yet married.
Yeah.
You're starting to think maybe this isn't the person for me.
Yeah.
But we're already in it.
Totally.
So it's going to be so much harder to get out of it than just to keep going.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's like, let's just take the next step.
Let's just get married now because we're already in it.
Yeah.
And that's like a unfortunate place to be.
Yeah.
And I think that's one of the downfalls outside of listening to the Word of God.
Yeah.
that that could potentially lead to.
For sure.
I also want to say,
like, if there's someone listening to this
and you're living with your girlfriend or your boyfriend,
like,
um,
it used to drive me crazy when I would like hear,
like,
pastors talk about,
like different sins or whatever.
Like,
I just want to be super transparent.
Like,
all have fallen short of the glory of God.
Like,
we could sit here and have a four hour episode of me
just telling you all the things that I did
that were against the will of the Lord.
And the really cool thing about the grace of Jesus is,
um,
all it takes is a moment of repentance to be forgiven.
And then you just turn,
and follow Jesus and do what he asks you to do.
And there's no condemnation for you.
So I just wanted to say that for anyone who might be in that season
because I know that there's a lot of people who are.
That's helpful.
Yeah.
I was sharing this with you earlier.
We've been talking about Pastor Jobi Martin the last 24 hours.
Legend.
And I was listening to a podcast of his earlier this week.
And he was talking about how to read the Bible.
And I thought this was very helpful.
This would have helped me a long time ago.
but he had three steps.
Like, as you're reading the Bible,
you ask yourself,
like, what did I just read?
What just happened?
Yeah.
And that is the context.
Yep.
And then the second question,
you ask, what does this mean?
The actual interpretation of the word.
Yeah.
Not your interpretation.
Right.
God's interpretation.
That's right.
That's right.
And then number three,
now what?
Yeah.
Like, how do I apply this?
Yeah.
To my life, what I'm doing.
Yeah.
And you said something earlier that I would love for you to kind of tap one again.
Yeah.
People start their journey of faith and it's like what can God do for me?
Like how do I get out of this?
Yeah.
As opposed to like how do I glorify God?
Yep.
How do you help people understand like what that looks like and means and how to explore that?
Yeah.
So like I think Jesus very easily can become a means to an end.
It's like, I hear that he died for me.
That's amazing.
Yeah, like, I trust you.
Like, there's two places that I can spend eternity.
One is really hot and one feels like San Diego.
Like, yeah, I prefer the one that's not really hot.
Like, I'll do that.
I follow you Jesus.
And then, like, you don't actually, you don't actually really have a relationship with the Lord.
You just are, like, using him to get to heaven.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
And then all of a sudden, you like, start, basically Jesus becomes an accessory.
Like, you wear the cross, but you don't.
follow him. You wear the cross, but you don't ever do the things that he did. And that's what, like,
we're pushing back on is like, really following Jesus comes with a cost. Like, when Jesus said,
pick up your cross and follow me, those early disciples knew, like, this comes with a cost. This is
going to cost our reputation. This is going to cost maybe our finances. This is going to cost maybe
our plans, our decisions. And ultimately, when you know that there's a cost to follow.
in Jesus, you've got to decide, do I want to do this enough? Like, I know we were talking about
John 5, like, do you want to be healed? In John 5, there's like this guy who's, he's been lame,
he's been paralyzed for 38 years. And it's like, that seems like a really obvious question of,
like, you've been lame for 38 years. Of course, you want to be healed. But Jesus doesn't ask dumb
questions, you know? Like, there was a reason he asked it. And I think the reason he asked it,
we talked about this last night and this morning, is,
is because there's a comfortability
that comes with your brokenness
and with your consumerism even.
And following Jesus,
like really following Jesus,
it looks like giving him your most valuable possession.
Jesus can't be your most valuable possession
until he has your most valuable possession.
And so it's like,
for some people, that's going to be money.
and for other people it's going to be what they do, you know, their vocation, their job.
And so what I'm not saying is like you have to quit your job or you have to like give away
every dollar in your bank account. What I am saying is that truly following Jesus looks like Jesus
saying, hey, like they're taking up an offering today and you're in the service and you hear him
like tugging on your heart to give towards it. You're not going, no, like this is mine.
it's you going, yeah, I'll give that $100 in the offering that he's asking me to do because he's the Lord of my life, not my money. Or, oh, okay, like, you want me to go this direction in my business? Man, that's a really hard decision. But ultimately, you're the Lord of my life. And so I surrender all to you, and I'm going to do that. Like, I value your plans more than my plans. That's what we're talking about. It's like, I'm just, he's not just someone who adds to my life, but he's somebody who, if he asks something from me,
me, I willingly lay it down. Does that make sense?
Yeah, I mean, everything is his. Yeah.
You know, like my prayer time, like I explained to you is in my sauna at night.
Yeah. I love that, by the way.
Which I'm excited for you to get a sauna. Me too.
It's like, it's a challenge being the first like 12 minutes of that prayer time is,
it's very present. Yeah. It's very deep.
the last three minutes, it's hard to focus on anything.
For sure.
So, like, you really got to go.
Well, we were in there today, man.
I was real close.
I was like, I don't know how much longer I could do this.
That's why I kept adding water on, because I'm smoking them out before we get in the water.
But that's like, it's really powerful time for me.
And when I'm in the sauna, I look out, the way our sauna set up, it's in our backyard.
And I see our pool.
I see our fire pit.
I see the backyard.
I can see where my kids' room are.
And it creates the perfect backdrop for a place of gratitude.
And I sit in there, I'm like, I start every prayer off with, Lord, I'm so grateful for all the abundance, the security, the wealth that you've provided us.
It is more than I could ever want or ask for.
Yeah.
But all of this is yours.
Yeah, that's great.
And one of the things that I was telling you.
about Chad Wright.
Yeah.
Chad Wright shared with me months ago and has become part of my prayer every day is,
God, please conform me to the image of your son, Jesus Christ, at all costs.
Wow.
And I say this and I really mean it, take it all.
Take it all.
Wow.
If you want it.
The house, the money, all of it.
And when I walk into HQ and then I'm oftentimes touring people, they ask me the question,
like how proud are you that like this is you built this is all yours yeah and i used to be like super
prideful like yeah yeah i worked really hard for this yeah look at it yeah and i can honestly say
now when i'm i'm asked that question like none of it's mine wow it's not mine wow none of it
yeah but that's that's been like uh a spiritual journey yeah it did not happen overnight yeah yeah
But that was forged through the storms that I've been in and many of these storms in the last year that have helped me learn that.
Yeah.
Are you familiar with the parable of the talents?
I don't think so.
You should read it soon.
I think it's my favorite parable.
So, like, Jesus tells all these stories in the gospels that are called parables.
And there's one called the Parable of the Talents.
There's basically these three guys that he gives different talents to.
and talents in Bible times,
it was like a certain amount of money.
So it's not like you're gifting,
like we would think of the word talent now.
But he gives each of them a different amount.
And basically,
he gives one a lot,
one kind of a medium amount,
and one a little.
And the one with a lot
and the one with the medium amount,
they go and they make a return
on the talent that he gives them.
They go invest it and they bring back a return.
They multiply it.
And then the one with one talent was so afraid to lose it that he buries the talent.
And when Jesus comes back, or not Jesus, but Jesus is telling the story.
So the man who represents Jesus in the story comes back.
And he's like, okay, what did you do with it?
And he has to dig it back up.
And he's like, look, I didn't lose it.
And the man in the story rebukes him and basically tells him to lose him.
leave. Like he's, he's very upset with him. And when I hear you saying that, I think of like God's blessed
you. He's blessed all of us with a certain amount of talent, a certain amount of gifting, a certain amount of
money, a certain amount of whatever it is. And what he's looking for is stewards, not owners,
who realized, like, this is what he gave me. I'm going to go make the biggest return on investment
possible, meaning the greatest impact possible with what he's given me, whether that's the biggest
impact through my finances, through my influence, through my time, through my gifting, whatever it is
so that ultimately I can bring back. And the thing that I always remind myself is you don't get to
decide the amount of talent that God gives you. The only thing you get to decide is will you bring
him back an investment on it? That's it. Because we all get a different amount. And some people can say,
that's fair, that's not. It doesn't matter. It's all his. The person that you find yourself
comparing yourself to the most that has more talent or whatever the thing is than you,
it's like it is the Lord's. Like you nailed it. It's like, and when you realize it's all his,
it not only helps you have a better relationship with what he's given you, but it helps you
have a better relationship with others to not compare, to not compete and just go, man, if we're all
trying to steward this for the glory of God, we're all going to hear well done, my good and faithful
servant, which is the goal of our life. Here's a question for you. Yeah. We all have been
given these different levels of talent.
And I'm following, it's not for us to own, it is for us to appropriately steward.
That's right.
How do you respond to someone that asks the question, this person has more talent than me?
Yeah.
And they're not a believer.
Yeah.
And they don't think the same way that I do.
And they're not doing it to glorify God.
Yeah.
How am I supposed to think of that individual and what they have?
Yeah.
I think our first posture as a believer should be not yet.
You know, like that's the heart that I think the Lord wants us to have.
It's like they're not stewarding it for him yet because they haven't met the right person.
That's fair.
Who's going to lead them to Jesus?
That's fair.
There's this other proverb that says that the wealth of the wicked is laid up for the just,
which means like there are people like that that I fully believe either haven't met Jesus yet
and they're going to meet Jesus, and it's going to be, you know, dude, you're a classic example.
I'm literally thinking that as you're saying. You're a classic example.
That's me in a nutshell. Yeah. So there's examples like you who it's like they just haven't had
their encounter with Jesus yet, but one day that will be stewarded for his glory and praise God.
I think God uses all sorts of crazy circumstances where like he blesses a thing and you don't see why
you blessed it until way later. I think there's other examples, unfortunately, where people
never follow Jesus, but that money doesn't go with them to where there's been in eternity,
and eventually it gets repurposed for God's kingdom. Fairness in the kingdom of God is a really
slippery slope to mess with. And the reason I say that is I saw the number one most questioned
thing for people who don't follow Jesus as far as the number one, like, most questioned thing for people who don't follow Jesus,
as far as like the thing that they wrestle with is like why do why do bad things happen to good
people why do good things happen to bad people you know flipping it and there's so many reasons for that
but even in the premise of the question there's kind of some like things that are messed up because
according to the Bible there are no good people like we've all fallen short of the glory of God
there was only one good person and his name was Jesus and he willingly sacrificed himself for us
and so just coming from that place of like hey like I try to
to do good, but ultimately, like, without Jesus, I can't. Like, that's the first thing. But the other thing is, like,
because we live in a fallen world, that's the part that people really miss. They're like, well, if,
you know, if I'm following Jesus, why doesn't he bless my thing? It's like, well, that's not,
that's not the point of following Jesus is to be, to be more blessed on earth. The point of following
Jesus is to go, man, I'm already the most blessed person of all time because my eternity is secured.
and no matter what happens to me on this side of eternity,
I am going to be with Jesus forever.
And so I just think, like,
there are so many things that we won't know on this side of heaven
as far as, like, why God chooses to do some of the things that he does,
bless some of the people that he blesses.
But I think the healthiest posture for our own soul
is when we see someone that God's blessing.
If they're a Christian, I like to say it this way.
It's like, don't get upset when God blesses your name.
neighbor because it means he's in the neighborhood. It's like, like, just celebrate, dude. Like,
you know, it's kind of like the ice cream truck. Like, I never got mad when the ice cream
truck stuck to my neighbor's house. Like, I knew he was going to come to my house next. Yeah,
that's good. That's like a healthy posture to have, I think. That's good. Um,
you brought up John 5 and I did want to talk about John 5. Yeah. My mentor and I were having a conversation
this past week about John 5. And he asked me the question, Nick, do you want to be healed?
in reference to the story of Jesus asking the paralyzed man.
Do you want to be healed?
And he made me think about it in a way that I've never thought about before.
You know, I've written this or read this scripture before many times.
And I always just like read past it.
And I never tried to interpret what Jesus.
was actually asking this man.
And then as I was preparing for this podcast,
I went on your Instagram.
Yeah.
And I saw you made a reaction video to Theo Vaughn.
Yeah.
Which have you ever, he lives in Nashville, I believe.
Have you guys ever connected?
I met him one time, believe it or not.
He was in a sauna at a place.
It was like a public place, a public gym that had a sauna.
And I opened the door to get in the sauna.
And he was sitting in there with headphones on and just looked up.
And I immediately closed the door because we kind of head nodded.
And it was just like, though, I'm going to let you do your thing.
And I turned around.
So I don't know that he would remember that.
But I have met him.
It was just very brief.
When I was in Nashville, I was going to Soho house one day.
Yeah.
That's where it was.
That's where it was.
Oh, it was?
Yeah.
He was walking past me.
As I'm walking past him, like, oh my gosh, this is Theo Vaughn.
And as he's passing me, he stops.
He dabs me up, pulls me in, gives me a hug.
Wow.
He goes, what's up, brother?
And then just keeps walking by me.
So good.
I walk up to the host that checks you at So House.
And I was like, that was Theo Bonn.
And she goes, yeah, he does that to everyone.
But you made a reaction video.
I love that.
He's been sharing some really, some good stuff lately.
You can tell he's really exploring.
He's hungry.
His faith.
Yeah.
In a very authentic and genuine and vulnerable place.
I agree, which is cool.
But you made a reaction video, and he was talking about John 5.
Yeah.
And you can watch his gear turning.
For sure.
As he's explaining what this meant to him.
Yeah.
And as Jesus is asking this paralyzed man, like, do you actually want this new life?
Yeah.
Because life you have right now, like you are being provided for.
You have comfort.
People are taking care of you.
As soon as I heal you,
You won't have those things anymore.
Are you ready to endure and embrace what's on the other side of healing?
Yeah.
And as I was reading this and we were talking about it, I think a lot of us, myself included, we say we want the other side.
Yeah.
We want to be healed.
But then we don't take the action to get there because there is fear of what is on the other side.
That's right.
And the more I read the Bible.
to be honest, the more impressed I am by like the golden nuggets.
You can reread the same chapter a thousand times.
Yeah.
And you pick up on something new every time.
Absolutely.
And it is the most beautifully written thing.
It is.
Ever.
Yep.
And I think like 20 years from now, I will still be mind blown.
Yeah.
But how much is in it that I,
actually don't see right now. Yeah. Absolutely. It's, it's, um, the only book where the author is always
present. So the Holy Spirit is always there when you're, when you're reading it. I think that's big
reason why we're always getting things out of it. What was crazy about that Theo Vaughan clip,
first of all, I love that he, like in that clip that I reacted to, he says, uh, there's a story. It's
called John 5. I just love the way he started that. He is, I believe this with all my heart. Theo Vaughan is
going to be an absolute force for the kingdom of God one day. Like, that's what I believe. Yeah.
But I would love to have a conversation with them. Oh, my goodness. Uh, there's, yeah. So I had just
preached a sermon two weeks before on John 5. So it was fresh. It was like fresh on me. And one of our
team members, he's actually here with me. His name's Andrew. He sent me that clip. And he was like,
dude, we got to, like, you got to respond to this. Like, one, he was like, this is incredible that
he is wrestling and this is going to encourage so many people that he is wrestling with with the Bible
and with what God says. But two, he lives in Nashville and maybe he would see this. Maybe this
would encourage him in his faith. He was getting pushback, as you can imagine, for even bringing
up the Bible. And so we were just kind of like, let's put something out there that's like for this
that hopefully people see and encourage him in. And we had tons of people who did that. But
in order for you to pick up the new thing that got.
wants to do in your life, you've got to put down the old things. And what you could see in Theo Vaughan
and what I absolutely believe you could see in John 5 if we were there 2,000 years ago is this,
man, healing would require me to put down so many old things. And this isn't super popular to talk about
in 2026. In fact, it gets you canceled a lot of times on the internet. But it's so easy to have a
victim mentality. Oh yeah. About like what you've been through. And there is a difference between being a
victim and having a victim mentality. So a victim has something happened to them. A victim mentality is when
you let that thing happen to you for the rest of your life. Where because that thing happened to you,
it now affects every part of the way you think. It affects the conversations you have. It affects the conversations you have.
It affects the relationships with you have.
It becomes your identity.
It becomes your identity.
And I think that that's what happened with the paralyzed man,
which is why Jesus had to ask him a question that seemed so obvious.
Do you want to be healed?
38 years, Bible scholars believe that he actually made good money as a beggar,
that you can make great money in that area of town,
that there was no real incentive for him to stop begging.
Like, it just, it makes me think of this.
Like, if you're a victim who's listening to this,
you've had something bad happened to you. As followers of Jesus, we have all the compassion in the
world for you. And so what we're not saying is that you need to toughen up. We're simply saying
that because of what Jesus did for you, you can get up. Like you don't have to stay there. Like you
have victory. You are more than a conqueror through Christ Jesus is what the Bible says,
which means that on the other side of you saying, yes, I want to be healed, there is actually
victory. Like you can have a new identity. You can
be somebody not just better, but alive.
Like the gospel is not about becoming better.
It's about becoming alive.
And when I think about the words of Jesus,
I am the way, the truth, and the life.
The life that he's talking about is the life that you've been looking for in all the wrong places.
You've been looking for in your old identities.
But the life that Jesus offers is Zoe life, which is abundant life.
It's life to the fullest.
It's life that actually fulfills.
do you remember the scripture?
I think it's in Matthew
that talks about
putting new wine
in old wine skins.
Yep, yep.
And
that,
I've been trying to find it,
I'm flipping through Matthew,
but
yeah,
I don't have a reference.
That really
spoke to me
when I first came across it.
Yeah.
Where,
if I imagine,
I give my life to Christ
and I am saved and I am new wine.
It's really easy to say
I want a new life. I want to be healed.
I want to lean into this relationship.
But it's also really comfortable
to go back to our old ways and old rhythms.
For sure. But if we put the new wine
in the old wine skin, the wine skins burst.
You can't put the new wine.
wine, the old wine skin. That's right. So once you have transformed, you have to take the step
forward and be bold. Totally. Or you will explode internally. Totally. I mean, think about Theo Vaughan.
Like, let's just use him as an example. Let's say Theo Vaughan decides, like, I'm going all in for
Jesus. Like, I'm going to have like a radical transformation and, uh, and follow Jesus. It's like,
how different would that make Theovan's life?
Like the sold-out comedy tours that he does,
I'm of the conviction that I think he would still sell them out
with a different demographic of people who are like,
dude, we love what God's doing in your life.
But like his content would probably have to change.
His shows would change.
His whole persona of what, I mean, his identity would be completely transformed.
There's got to be so much, so much fear in that.
Absolutely. I mean, and anyone who says that there isn't is being naive. Like there's so much fear in that. Like, let's just be real. And the whole reason we reacted to the clip is because we wanted to acknowledge, like, this dude has a lot to lose if he decides to follow Jesus. And people don't talk about the cost of following Jesus. Yeah. And we made the clip to say, hey, Theo, we see you. We're praying for you. And on the other side of you picking up your cross and making this decision, I promise you. It is
way going to outweigh the cost, the benefits that being a follower of Jesus come with,
that knowing Christ is Lord of your life is going to outweigh anything. Paul said,
I counted as nothing. One translation says, I count it all as dog poop compared to knowing Christ
Jesus is Lord. And it's like, ultimately, you can't make that decision for anyone else.
But man, we just made the clip trying to encourage him, like, you can do this, dude.
It is fearful, but man on the other side, it's so much better.
That's why they call it being bold.
That's right.
Like that is, when you have, I mean, it's bold regardless,
but when you have a lot, I don't want to say to lose,
but like, there's a lot that you're turning off.
Yeah.
In that step.
Yeah.
That is a bold move, but it is so respectable.
Yep.
To stand for something as opposed to fall for anything.
That's right.
the last thing I wanted to touch on.
You shared this in a sermon, and man, this spoke to me a lot.
You said, we serve a God who does not give opportunity, but gives assignments.
Yeah.
And you went on to talk about the difference between a God-given assignment versus a man-made
opportunity.
Yeah.
How do we know if we're pursuing a God-given assignment or a man-made opportunity?
Yeah, so it might be helpful for me to try to define the difference first. A man-made opportunity might make your name great. A God-given assignment will make God's name great. A man-made opportunity might bring more money into your bank account. An assignment will bring more people into heaven. So opportunities are not necessarily evil or bad. So that's something that needs to be said. It's like there will be opportunities that
come our way and just because it leads to more of something that this world has to offer,
as long as it's not sin, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's bad.
So money, wealth is not bad.
It's not bad.
It's bad when it becomes the thing that rules us instead of us stewarding it.
That's when it becomes bad, right?
Jesus never said that money was evil.
He said the love of money was the root of all evil.
And so that's really important distinction.
But unfortunately, what happens is a lot of people say,
sacrifice their assignment for more opportunity. So we were talking last night, like, I think it's
really clear just from being your friend for a short amount of time that we've been friends,
that your assignment is to help other people. Like from the day, like the first time I met you
at the park, you were like talking about coming back to Austin because you cared so much about
your team. You cared so much about helping people. And it's like the avenue in which you
have helped people for the last 14 years, I think you said. 14 years. 14 years has been
helping them become healthier, helping them grow in their fitness, helping them grow in their
discipline, helping them grow in these different areas. Like, that's clearly the assignment on your
life is to impact people and to help them. What would be catastrophic would be going, hey,
instead of helping people, what I would prefer to do is just chase more opportunity that's going to
lead to more money, more whatever. Sometimes our assignment does lead to those things naturally,
And that's okay.
But where it doesn't become okay is when we sacrifice what God's called us to do
so that we can gain more of what the world has to offer.
So how do you know if you're sometimes an opportunity can look like an assignment?
Yep.
What's a confirmation that you're pursuing the right one?
So an assignment will always bring glory to God, first and foremost,
and it will always be for the good of other people in some way, shape, or form.
So those two things are kind of pillars.
The other thing is your assignment often comes with a cost of some kind.
So, you know, for instance, I'll just talk about my assignment I feel like is to be a pastor,
to teach people God's word and to make disciples.
Like that's what I feel like my assignment is.
And the cost of that is that sometimes I have to say things.
that are very against culture.
And we were talking about last night offline,
some of the things that people have done
and said about my family because of it.
And some of the things we've had to do just safety-wise.
And it's like, I'm not despising that.
That just comes, that's just the cost of what I'm called to do.
And I'm honored to do this.
Like compared to people in other parts of the world,
that's nothing that people say mean things to you.
In other parts of the world, people die for doing what I do.
So I'm very blessed.
all that to say, there's often a cost that comes with it. And sometimes it's hidden. But the other thing
about an assignment is that it's really hard and can be extremely challenging, but at the same time,
there's a grace on it. So like, it feels like you're running downhill a little bit, where I'm still
exerting lots of effort. I'm still, like, my heart rate is still up. But this shouldn't be as
easy as it is. It's like an example of this would be like when we moved to Nashville is like we had zero
money. We were so poor. We would walk by the pond and ducks would throw bread at us. We had no team.
We had nothing. We just knew like this is the assignment God's given us is to start this church.
And it was really, really hard. Like we were, I mean, we started with six people and we're meeting
in our living room and we're praying and we're casting this crazy vision to six people. And for the
last two and a half years, we've seen 1,500 people give their life to Jesus for the first time.
We're about to start a second location. All these things in two and a half years. And it just
kind of feels like we're running downhill. Like hard things, hard conversations, hard obstacles,
but it just feels like God's hand is on it. The Bible would call it God's grace. God's grace
makes impossible things possible. And that's when,
you know you're running in your God-given assignment is I'm doing hard things for the glory of God,
the good of others, and there seems to be a grace on it. Does that make sense? Absolutely. Yeah.
Actually, like, it's really good to hear because that is confirmation to me. At least I think
that I'm one assignment right now. Yeah. There's a huge cost and sacrifice to
to the assignment that I believe I'm one right now.
Yeah.
And I'm still battling a lot of battles.
Yeah.
And fighting the day to day.
And it's by no means easy.
But of where I'm trying to get to.
Yeah.
And I believe that my assignment is taking me to,
it does feel like I'm running downhill.
Things are just falling into place.
Yeah.
Other parts of my life, you know,
outside of that direct assignment.
Sure.
Yeah, it's like there's still a lot of hardship.
But for where I feel like God is taking me,
and I've told Steph that's like all these things are falling into a place almost too easy.
Wow.
Without us having to do anything.
Yeah.
And it's a really good, like as I'm, as you were explaining that,
that is a very good breakdown.
Yeah.
Like what the difference between a man made opportunity and a God given assignment is.
And when you try to pursue the main made opportunities,
it exhausts you.
Oh, I know.
Me too.
Dude.
I know.
Yeah, and like, you know, right now, I'm in a stressful season of life,
and I'm working really hard, but I'm not exhausted.
For the first time in a long time.
Wow.
Like a long time.
Wow.
I have been exhausted for, for me, much of the last 14 years.
Yeah.
I feel like I was in some sort of zombie state of pure exhaustion.
But for the first time, I don't feel like I'm in that state right now.
Man, it's awesome.
It feels really good.
You're running your lane, man.
Yeah.
Simon.
But it doesn't mean it's all blue skies and rainbows and it'd be really easy for me if I didn't have the perspective or insight or the right people around me, these conversations.
Yeah.
To focus on all the.
bad things that are happening.
Yeah.
And they're like, man, there's nothing working.
Yeah.
But I just have to look at it a little bit differently and think, oh, everything's working.
There's like, there's things that aren't, I'm not happy about.
Yeah.
But like, it's all still leading me.
I'm still running downhill.
Right.
And I can feel that.
And what I love about being around guys like you is it, I feel like you naturally get
the idea of.
of taking big swings for the kingdom
or big swings for your assignment.
And like, that's the thing that I really hope
as people are listening to the end of this,
like, I hope people will do more of that.
Because like when I read scripture,
like we talked a little bit about ambition,
even on this podcast in a roundabout way.
It's like the Bible says,
do nothing out of selfish ambition.
But there's a big difference between selfish and godly ambition.
Like selfish ambition,
is pursuing man-made opportunities.
Godly ambition is going,
hey, I just believe that God is so big and God is so good
and that he actually wants to like ring out
every possible part of my life for his glory
that we should take bigger risk for the kingdom of God.
Like when you read the story of David,
there was no part of that dude
that was not full of godly ambition.
Like when he runs out and goes to fight Goliath
and calls him an uncircumcised Philistine,
which is like the ultimate Bible disword ever.
And then attacks him.
It's like, dude, that's the kind of fate that I want to have as like we're pursuing our assignments is like, man, like this is a big swing.
But imagine how much glory God could get from this if this works.
Like, I think that God really loves to show up for people like that and show out because he knows that he'll get the glory from it.
Yeah, I like thinking of myself as a warrior of God.
like Leonidas from 300
with like the six-pack abs
the huge chest the beard and like the
the sword and like the armor
I imagine like that kind of warrior for God
as opposed like this
softer gentler
person
but yeah man
the journey has been so rewarding
and
it's really hard for me not to take the big swings
because I've never gotten excited about the incremental stuff.
Yeah.
Like, even when it comes to business,
I'll have people come in here and do an audit
and show us where we can make incremental progress.
Like, damn, get excited about the incremental stuff.
Where's the big swing?
Like, let me go take the big swing.
And I know it's like massive risk,
but huge reward at the same time.
Yeah.
that's what I want to be on that mission.
Yeah, yeah.
In the kingdom of God, man,
it's really nice knowing that the Lord's behind you.
Yeah.
You know, I'm taking this big swing,
but ultimately, if he's the one who told me to do it,
it's him who's foot in the bill.
It's him who's going to show up, you know.
And it brings a lot of exhilaration
and at the same time peace.
Just because who better to have on your side?
You know, it's like, what is money to him?
What is team to him?
what is fear to him.
It's like, it's all got a bow to him.
Yeah.
So I'm taking big swings.
Oh, brother, I appreciate you.
This was great.
It's an honor.
I love what you're doing.
I can't have to be able to sit, you know,
Sundays.
Yeah.
Listen to your sermons.
It's going to be awesome.
At some point, but very grateful for you, dude.
Grateful for you, bro.
Such an honor to be here.
Thanks for taking care of us.
And I love this podcast.
So it's a huge honor to be on it.
Thank you, man.
You know.
