Field Notes: 5 Day Devo

Mission Sent

Field Notes is your daily 5-minute briefing designed to take Sunday's truth and put it to work Monday through Friday. Grab your gear and get ready for a daily rundown, challenge, and action step that will equip you to live intentionally for the Kingdom.

  1. 1d ago

    Why Physical Needs Feel So Loud

    Hunger has a way of hijacking your attention. So does fatigue, stress, and the constant itch for comfort. We open Matthew 4:3–4 and look at the first temptation Jesus faces after forty days of fasting, and it’s shockingly ordinary: “Turn these stones into bread.” No elaborate argument, just a direct push to satisfy the body right now. That’s the point. Physical needs are loud, and when they’re loud enough, they can drown out everything else we say we care about. We talk honestly about why it matters that Jesus is fully human. The Word became flesh, which means Jesus feels the real limits of a human body and still chooses obedience. From Maslow’s hierarchy of needs to the way our calendars revolve around meals and comfort, we explore how easily physical sustenance becomes the “linchpin” of daily life while God’s Word gets treated like an optional add-on. We also connect this to practical ministry and why the church has to show up for real needs in the community. When someone is worried about feeding their family, they won’t hear our theology first. Meeting physical needs with love and compassion often earns the right to speak to deeper spiritual needs, just like Jesus feeding the 5,000 and then teaching. To make it real, we end with a simple challenge: skip one meal if it’s medically safe, or give up something like your phone for a day, and let every pang of hunger or urge to scroll become a cue to open Scripture and read. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What comfort do you reach for first when life gets hard?

    Why Physical Needs Feel So Loud
  2. Jul 9

    Why Jesus Refuses To Fight Back In Gethsemane

    Silence can feel like losing, especially when you’re accused, misunderstood, or publicly challenged. We walk through a moment in Matthew 26:52–53 that flips that instinct on its head: Jesus is betrayed and arrested in the Garden of Gethsemane, Peter lashes out with a sword, and Jesus responds with a rebuke, a miracle, and restraint. He reminds Peter that he could call on the Father and receive more than twelve legions of angels, yet he refuses to flex.  We talk about what that means for real life. If Jesus holds all things together and still chooses not to seize control, then his silence is not passivity, it is purposeful strength. We connect Jesus’ calm to meekness, defined as having power but choosing to bridle it. That is the kind of discipleship that goes beyond Sunday: learning to resist the urge to defend our reputation at any cost, and trusting God enough to let him be our defender. Romans 12 brings it home with a hard but freeing command: don’t repay evil for evil, because vengeance belongs to the Lord.  Then we get practical with an action step you can use today in your texts, meetings, and tense conversations: practice the pause. When you feel triggered, stop, count to five, and ask, “Does defending myself serve the Kingdom of heaven, or is it serving my kingdom?” If it is just your kingdom, drop it and move on. If you found this devotional helpful, subscribe for more Field Notes, share it with a friend who needs peace in conflict, and leave a review so others can find it.

    Why Jesus Refuses To Fight Back In Gethsemane
  3. Jul 8

    How To Stop Fighting Every Argument And Start Living With Peace;

    Your feed is loud, your group chats are spicy, and your blood pressure is one comment away from skyrocketing. We slow the pace with a midweek devotional that cuts straight to the heart of modern conflict: not everything deserves your reaction, your reply, or your energy. Using 2 Timothy 2:23–24 as the anchor, we talk about why “foolish, ignorant controversies” multiply quarrels and how a faithful life looks more like kindness, patience, and steady self-control than nonstop sparring.  We bring in a simple martial arts metaphor that makes the lesson stick. A white belt can be more dangerous than a black belt, not because of skill, but because of frantic proving energy. A black belt knows they belong, stays calm, and keeps control of both temper and technique. That same contrast shows up in our relationships, our workplaces, and especially online. When we feel threatened or insecure, we swing at everything. When we live grounded, we can teach, endure, and choose restraint without backing down from what truly matters.  The big takeaway is practical: not every hill can be a hill to die on. We look at Jesus as the model of strength under control, someone with all the power to win any fight who still chooses when to engage. Then we end with an action step you can do today: write down the four or five hills that are actually worth it, and when the next outrage pops up, check the list and decide whether to walk away. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s tired of arguing, and leave a review with the one “hill” you’re choosing to protect.

    How To Stop Fighting Every Argument And Start Living With Peace;
  4. Jul 7

    What If Your Anger Is Untamed Power

    Strength gets praised when it’s loud, forceful, and impossible to ignore, but Scripture points to a different kind of power: the kind that stays under control. Pastor Josh takes us to Proverbs 16:32, where real greatness is tied to being slow to anger and ruling your spirit, and then connects that wisdom to the fruit of the Spirit and the way we show up in everyday relationships. If you’ve ever excused an outburst as “just being strong” or called control issues “standing my ground,” this one will challenge you in the best way.  We unpack the first-century meaning of meekness through the Greek word praios, a military term used for a tamed war horse. That image flips the common myth that meek equals weak. A war horse is built for chaos, trained for battle, and still fully responsive to the reins. That’s the heart of biblical meekness: power under control, strength submitted to the Holy Spirit, and the maturity to choose restraint even when you could overpower the moment.  Pastor Josh also shares a practical picture from navigating a flats boat through shallow water. Having horsepower isn’t the skill; using the exact amount needed is. We bring it home with diagnostic questions about where our power runs wild and a clear action step: name one relationship or environment where you tend to “lay the hammer down,” then pray for discipline and Spirit-led reactions there today. If you want practical Christian guidance on self-control, anger, and emotional restraint, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with what you’re working on right now.

    What If Your Anger Is Untamed Power

About

Field Notes is your daily 5-minute briefing designed to take Sunday's truth and put it to work Monday through Friday. Grab your gear and get ready for a daily rundown, challenge, and action step that will equip you to live intentionally for the Kingdom.