Scripture References: James 4:13-15; Mark 8:34-38 (or Matt 16:24-27); Hebrews 10:32-39; Genesis 12:1; 2 Samuel 10:12; Daniel 3; Galatians 2:20Intro: We're continuing to unpack our mission: beholding Jesus and putting His brilliance on display through obedience, surrender, and devotion. Last week focused on authenticity, confessing our struggles. This week, we explore another result of obedience: Risk. Living obediently requires us to risk, moving beyond our comfort zones for God's sake.Key Points:Risk is Inescapable: We crave security, but a risk-free life is a myth. Because we have limited knowledge and control over the future (James 4:13-15), risk is woven into life. Jesus promises His faithful presence, not certainty of circumstances.Comfort Culture vs. Kingdom Culture: Our culture prioritizes comfort, security, and control. Jesus's call to deny self, take up a cross, and follow Him flies in the face of this (Mark 8:34). He rebuked Peter for focusing on human comfort over God's purposes (Mark 8:33).Our Heritage of Risk: The Bible is filled with stories of people facing chaos and danger yet choosing faith over fear (Abraham, Joab, Shadrach/Meshach/Abednego, Paul). Christianity historically thrives when challenged, not when comfortable. We're called to persevere, not shrink back (Heb 10:32-39).The Paradox of Losing and Saving: Jesus promises that trying to save our life (through comfort, self-preservation) leads to losing it. But losing our life for His sake and the gospel's leads to truly finding it (Mark 8:35). Real life is found in following Him into discomfort.The Motivation for Risk: Success isn't guaranteed in every risk taken for God (short-term). Our fuel is the eternal perspective: this life is temporary ("a mist"). We live for eternal reward, not earthly accumulation. We run a race, shedding hindrances, knowing "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose" (Jim Elliot).Conclusion: The call to follow Christ is a call to embrace risk and discomfort, trusting Him over our desire for safety. Our spiritual ancestors modeled this courage. We must decide: Is comfort our king, or is Christ? Choosing Christ means following Him even when it's costly, knowing true life is found in losing ours for His sake.Call to Action:Honestly answer: Is comfort or Christ reigning in your decisions?Renounce the voice of the "god of comfort" urging you to play it safe, hold back, save yourself, or remain indifferent.Ask the Holy Spirit for boldness and courage to obey God, even when it requires risk.Take the next step of faith God is calling you to, trusting Him with the outcome. Support the show*Summaries and transcripts are generated using AI. Please notify us if you find any errors.