20 Habits That Killed My Lukewarm Faith
1. I admitted I built idols
Book of Exodus 20:3
Comfort, attention, control. I tore them down.
2. I stopped feeding lust
First Epistle to the Corinthians 6:18
I stopped entertaining what was destroying me.
3. I took my thoughts seriously
Second Epistle to the Corinthians 10:5
My mind was shaping me.
4. I watched my words
Book of Proverbs 18:21
My words were exposing my heart.
5. I stopped pretending I was confused
Book of Proverbs 3:5–6
I knew what needed to change.
6. I removed what pulled me back
Gospel of Matthew 5:29
If it owned me, it had to go.
7. I chose growth over comfort
Gospel of Luke 9:23
Comfort was keeping me stuck.
8. I cut distractions
Book of Psalms 46:10
Noise was numbing me.
9. I showed up anyway
First Epistle to Timothy 4:7
Feelings stopped leading.
10. I stopped hiding
Epistle of James 5:16
Silence was feeding it.
11. I took repentance seriously
Acts of the Apostles 3:19
I actually changed.
12. I watched what I consumed
Epistle to the Colossians 3:2
It was shaping me.
13. I stopped excusing small sins
First Epistle to the Corinthians 5:6
Small things added up.
14. I let conviction sit
Epistle to the Hebrews 4:12
I stopped running.
15. I obeyed immediately
Book of Proverbs 3:5–6
No more delay.
16. I chose the right people
Book of Proverbs 27:17
I needed accountability.
17. I cared about my private life
Gospel of Matthew 6:6
Who I was alone mattered.
18. I practiced gratitude
First Epistle to the Thessalonians 5:18
It broke the numbness.
19. I stayed consistent
Gospel of John 15:4
Even when it felt dry.
20. I remembered the cost
Second Epistle to the Corinthians 5:15
Everything changed there.
I urge you to study Ezekiel 37:1-14. You will understand the importance of speaking into your life. You can literally recreate your future with the words you speak, especially when you declare the Word of God over any circumstances.
I charge you to start speaking to your finances, your marriage, your job, and declare your expectations over all that concerns you. Watch what will happen!
Nottingham Forest star Ola Aina is gaining attention online after boldly declaring that earthly kingdoms may rise and fall, but Yeshua’s kingdom will reign forever.
His powerful statement about faith and eternity has resonated with many Christians, with supporters praising him for openly speaking about Jesus in the world of professional sports.
Fans say more athletes are becoming unafraid to share their faith publicly and use their platform to point people toward God instead of fame or success.
The quote has quickly spread across social media as believers call it a reminder that God’s kingdom is eternal while everything on earth eventually fades away.
#OlaAina #JesusChrist #Yeshua #Faith #Christianity #God #Football #Bible
🚨 Pep Guardiola ends the debate over who is the greatest manager between himself and Sir Alex Ferguson:
“I don’t think there is any real debate for me.”
“What Alex Ferguson achieved in football is something extraordinary.”
“To stay at the top for so many years with Manchester United, rebuilding different generations of teams and continuing to win, is almost impossible.”
“I have always said Sir Alex is the benchmark for every manager.”
“Yes, I won many trophies and I’m proud of what we achieved at Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Manchester City.”
“But longevity matters.”
“Sir Alex dominated English football for decades.”
“He adapted to different eras, different players and different styles of football and still remained successful.”
“That is greatness.”
“As coaches, we all leave ideas behind, but Sir Alex built a culture and mentality that lasted for generations.”
“I learned a lot watching his teams and the way his players fought for him.”
“For me, if people call me one of the greatest managers, I am honoured.”
“But Sir Alex Ferguson is in a different category because what he did is part of football history forever.”
{@FabrizioRomano }
Kevin James revealed he once fasted for 40 days straight — all for his daughter.
She was on the spectrum, struggling with tics and sleepless nights. Nothing else was working. So he turned to prayer and fasting. He planned to do it one tough day at a time, but it stretched into 40. On the very day he was about to quit from hunger, his daughter told him she’d finally slept well.
The breakthrough came quietly, not dramatically. He kept going. The prayers, he said, were being answered.
In a noisy world full of quick fixes, this is a powerful reminder that turning to God and embracing discipline can open doors we can’t force open on our own.
There’s something deeply encouraging about stories like this — they show that God often works in the waiting, through our small acts of faithfulness. It’s a beautiful nudge to keep showing up in prayer, even when it feels hard or pointless at first.
Have you ever seen prayer and perseverance bring a breakthrough that surprised you?