Victory is not just a moment we reach. It is a way of life we walk out daily in Jesus. Kevin Nickerson preached from Matthew 14 and the story of Peter walking on the water, reminding students that victory in Christ means overcoming, prevailing, and continuing forward even when the storm is still raging. The world often defines victory as winning a game, reaching a goal, or arriving at a destination, but biblical victory is deeper than that. It is learning to live, move, and trust through Christ. Kevin walked through six practical movements for living a victorious life: desire, decision, dedication, distraction, deliverance, and declaration. Peter had a desire to be where Jesus was. He made a decision to get out of the boat. He stayed focused on Christ long enough to do the impossible. But when distraction came, he began to sink, and his deliverance came through one simple prayer: “Lord, save me.” “You’re not fighting for victory,” Kevin said. “You’re fighting from victory because Jesus has already won it for you and for me.” He also reminded us, “Victory is not necessarily a destination. Victory is actually a way of life.” This message is a practical call to get out of the boat and walk toward Jesus. The boat may represent comfort, control, familiarity, or fear, but faith requires movement. Desire alone is not enough. We must make the decision to trust God, stay dedicated to the process, keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, ask Him for help when we sink, and declare the victory He has already won. The application is simple: desire more of God, decide to follow Him, stay dedicated when the emotion fades, overcome distractions, cry out for deliverance, and declare what God has done. In Christ, failure does not define us. Stumbling is a moment, not our identity. Victory is found as we keep walking with Jesus.