When Was the Last Time You Stopped to Hear God?
Divine obedience.
I can't say for most of my life I understood what it meant.
To be in the listening to where God wants me to be requires choosing to have enough time and space to listen.
Yet I've always been rewarded by doing things quickly.
Time and space seemed unnecessary.
Or they were needed for folks who didn't learn or pick something up as fast as I did.
When I type that now, I almost cringe.
"Be still—and know that I am God."
It is in the stillness, the soft whisper, that I often get to meet God.
And that was elusive for big chunks of time in my life.
I'd be running from one event to the next ... running from one opportunity and experience, and often get there out of breath, only to head out again on what I told myself was the next adventure.
Rarely did I ever stop and consider where God wanted to lead me.
Rarely did my leadership include Him.
Rarely did I end up someplace refreshed and renewed—and at peace.
Looking back, I can see the patterns that ran my life, and how far away from divine obedience they were.
Yet that's what free will is about.
The ability to choose.
With intention.
When you listen to the world's ways, you'll always end up depleted because you're never doing enough.
Divine obedience has you listen, and carve out a path of peace and ease.
That doesn't mean everything will go your way.
Far from it.
It does mean that you get to walk every moment stress-free.
Even when it looks like everything around you is crashing down.
I've lived through fires, floods, and tornados ... and walked away unscathed.
I'm not sure the odds of doing this are even possible, let alone probable.
Yet here I am.
In the midst of the storm, and there will always be a storm, your leadership will ensure you walk on water or drown.
With divine obedience, the former is a guarantee.
And I gotta tell you that writing all of this out feels scary.
For decades, I've been celebrated for my left-brain business mind ... the part of me that doesn't let emotion or things like faith get in the way of building a business with a sound strategy, processes, and standard operating procedures.
I can—and have—helped scale hundreds of businesses to reach the elusive 7-figure mark in business, and I still do that in my work today.
Yet, today I don't do it without taking everything to prayer.
You may have met me when that wasn't how I operated, and my current business model doesn't work for you.
And I get that.
I just can no longer pretend that I'm somebody that I'm not.
I take a fierce stand for my clients and their success—and for me, that involves taking every problem and challenge they face to God first.
Together, we create a solution that is designed for the betterment of mankind —and includes everyone in their life.
Again, I don't love talking about this.
And, it's my Truth.
So, how often do you stop and listen to where God is trying to lead you?
ACTION: The Upside Challenge for the week is to create space before you create movement.
Choose one moment each day where you would normally push ahead.
And instead of doing, stop.
Sit in stillness for three minutes and invite God into the moment.
Ask, “What is mine to do right now?”
Wait.
Take only the next faithful step you sense.
This is divine obedience practiced daily.
Calm leadership that walks on water.










