Standing Firm

Standing Firm

Standing Firm: The Power of Principled Conviction

In every generation, there is a need for men who are grounded—not just in strength or intellect, but in character. The kind of character that doesn’t shift with public opinion or fold under pressure. Godly, manly character is built on conviction, integrity, and moral courage. It’s the quiet strength to do what’s right when it’s hard, to speak truth when it’s unpopular, and to stand firm when others walk away. This kind of character isn’t built overnight. It’s forged over time—through choices, challenges, and a commitment to live by something greater than yourself.

Young men today are constantly bombarded with messages telling them to blend in, go with the flow, or build their lives around popularity and success. But God is calling for something more. He’s calling for young men to grow into warriors of conscience—men who live with purpose, led by truth, not trend. Men who are unafraid to stand alone when necessary because they are standing on the rock of their convictions.

One powerful example of this kind of character is Benjamin Rush, a man whose life story shouts of principled conviction.

Benjamin Rush’s life was defined by the courage to stand by his beliefs, even when those beliefs made him unpopular or placed him in opposition to prevailing cultural and political winds. When Rush put his signature on the Declaration of Independence, he did so fully aware of the consequences. He wasn’t driven by personal gain or public approval, but rather by a commitment to what he knew was morally right and necessary.

His principled conviction extended into education, where he passionately advocated for public schools to include biblically grounded moral instruction. Rush believed that without virtue and moral clarity, neither individuals nor the young Republic could thrive. He understood that character formation was foundational, a critical element in building strong communities and a righteous nation.

Politically, Rush boldly stepped outside party lines. While factions and partisan allegiances defined the political landscape, he chose instead to call himself a “Christocrat”—someone whose ultimate allegiance wasn’t to any political party but to Christ himself. Guided by faith rather than factional loyalty, Rush set an inspiring example of integrity and independence.

Perhaps nowhere was Rush’s moral courage clearer than in his stance against slavery. At a time when abolition wasn’t politically convenient or popular, Rush took a firm stand. He viewed slavery as morally reprehensible, a sin against humanity and God. His unwavering advocacy for equality and justice marked him as a man of profound moral clarity and deep courage.

The life of Benjamin Rush powerfully illustrates that true masculinity and godliness are rooted in the courage to stand firm in one’s convictions, regardless of the consequences. His legacy challenges each of us today: Are we guided by convenience or by conscience? Do we possess the courage to stand apart, not driven by popularity but by a principled, godly conviction?

Scripture:
“Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.”
—Joshua 1:9

Challenge:
Are you living to blend in, to stay comfortable, to avoid the heat? Or are you willing to stand alone, if that’s what it takes to stand with God? Because the truth is, your character isn’t proven in the spotlight—it’s revealed in the moments when no one’s cheering, when it costs you something. Live today in a way that you’ll be proud to answer for when you stand before your Creator.

Love One Another

Love One Another

Love One Another: Experiencing and Reflecting the Heart of Jesus

Have you ever felt Jesus’ love through the hug of a friend, the quiet prayer of a sister, or the unexpected kindness of someone who simply saw you? Sometimes the most tangible expressions of Jesus’ love come through the hands and words of the people around us.

We don’t just express our love for Jesus in songs or prayers—we show it when we love others. And in turn, we often experience His love most deeply through the love we receive from one another. It’s not just a command—it’s a holy invitation into the shared heartbeat of heaven.

Jesus said it clearly: â€œA new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” (John 13:34–35)

Love is the distinguishing mark of a true disciple. Not theological brilliance. Not perfect behavior. Love. The kind of love that sacrifices, forgives, and reaches out.

Jesus takes it a step further in Matthew 25:40 when He says, â€œTruly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.” In other words, when we care for the overlooked, the burdened, the hurting—we’re loving Jesus Himself.

That’s the mystery: He allows Himself to be seen and touched in the needs of others. And when we respond with compassion, we are ministering directly to Him.

John, the disciple who knew the heartbeat of Jesus well, writes in 1 John 4:12, â€œNo one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us.” What a beautiful truth—that God’s invisible presence becomes visible in the way we love.

Think of those moments when someone’s love came at just the right time—a word, a hug, a prayer. Didn’t it feel like a whisper from Jesus Himself? His love flows through people, and when we love one another, we become a part of His ongoing work.

This love is both a responsibility and a gift. Paul writes, â€œCarry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” (Galatians 6:2) Love isn’t always easy. It costs us something—our time, our comfort, our pride. But that’s when it begins to look like His.

Some people are difficult to love—but they are just as deserving of a touch from Jesus. And sometimes, that touch has to come through my hands.

Sometimes, people don’t feel like they’ve experienced the love of Jesus—not because He hasn’t reached out, but because they’ve quietly closed the door to being loved by His people. Whether due to past hurts or protective walls, they resist the very vessels God longs to use. And at the same time, there are moments when His people simply miss the call. We hesitate, hold back, or let our own insecurities speak louder than His prompting. But what a grace-filled truth: Jesus continues to pursue us, gently urging both the giver and the receiver toward love.

The longer we walk with Jesus, the more we recognize His love not just in the sacred moments of prayer and worship, but in the shared life of community. We love Him by loving others. We encounter Him through the love of others. And we walk in His presence when we walk in love.

Let His love flow through you today—and watch how it comes back to meet you in the most unexpected places.

Reflection: Who needs to feel the love of Jesus through you today? And are you open to receiving His love through someone else?

Build a Life That Doesn’t Need a Babysitter

You made it to Friday, outlaws. That means one of two things:

  1. You’ve been nodding along all week.
  2. You’ve been rage-scrolling while eating Cheez-Its and muttering, “This guy doesn’t know me.”

Either way—today is where it all lands.

This week wasn’t just about politics. It wasn’t just about manhood. It wasn’t even just about self-discipline. It was about this:

Building a life so anchored in Christ and so rooted in responsibility… that no government, no boss, no crisis, and no system needs to manage you.

In other words:

Build a life that doesn’t need a babysitter.


You Don’t Need More Freedom—You Need to Be Someone Who Can Handle It

Real talk:
A lot of people scream for liberty, but they live like high-functioning toddlers.

  • They want freedom of speech… but can’t stop lying.
  • They want the right to bear arms… but can’t bear criticism.
  • They want to raise their own kids… but don’t want to raise themselves first.
  • They want to limit government… but outsource everything from food to schooling to morality.

That’s not liberty. That’s entitlement.


This Isn’t Complicated—Just Uncomfortable

Here’s a secret you probably already know deep down:
You know what needs to change.

You don’t need a committee. You don’t need a program. You don’t need a motivational podcast recorded in a cold garage with ambient rain sounds.

You need to stop making excuses and start moving like a man on mission.

  • Start reading Scripture like it’s not optional.
  • Start sweating daily, praying hourly, repenting instantly.
  • Start waking up with a plan and going to bed with peace.
  • Start teaching your kids what it means to fear God and walk free.

No one is coming to save you from the responsibilities you keep dodging.
But here’s the good news: God already equipped you to face them.


The Bible’s Blueprint for Self-Governed Living

“Do not be slothful in zeal, be fervent in spirit, serve the Lord.” â€” Romans 12:11
“Let all things be done decently and in order.” â€” 1 Corinthians 14:40
“Discipline yourself for the purpose of godliness.” â€” 1 Timothy 4:7

God didn’t design us to live like wild animals waiting for orders—He created us in His image to lead, to build, to bless, to protect, to serve, to conquer sin.

Outlaw Faith isn’t about living without rules. It’s about living under the only Rule that matters—and letting that shape everything else.


The Outlaw Faith Wrap-Up:

This week, we tore off the bandaid:

  • Freedom starts with self-governance.
  • Weak men lead to strong tyrants.
  • Real men don’t need constant oversight—they live as if God is watching (because He is).
  • The system isn’t just broken—it’s built to babysit the undisciplined.
  • But you? You’re not called to be another cog.
    You’re called to be a threat to tyranny… because you’re ruled by Someone higher.

All week we’ve hit one truth from every angle:

You don’t need more freedom. You need to become the kind of man who can handle it.

Because here’s the deal — freedom isn’t just a right. It’s a responsibility. And if you’re not responsible, you’re not free — you’re just unsupervised.

Build Something Better — Like the Founders Did

The men who built this country? They didn’t wait around for someone to fix it. They fixed it themselves — by becoming the kind of men who didn’t need a king, didn’t want a nanny state, and definitely weren’t asking for more government handouts.

Next week, we’re going to meet some of them. Not just the cherry-picked textbook versions — I mean the real men:

🧠 Benjamin Rush â€” Medical genius, education reformer, and a man who said the Bible belongs in schools because self-government starts with moral clarity.

📜 Thomas Paine â€” The firebrand behind Common Sense, who called kings “the most ignorant and unfit men to rule.” Spoiler: He was right.

✍️ John Adams â€” The guy who said the Constitution is “wholly inadequate” for anyone who isn’t moral and religious. (Translation: If you’re a moral mess, this whole experiment doesn’t work.)

🧠 Thomas Jefferson â€” The man everyone thinks was a secularist, who actually believed liberty came only from Godand warned that if we forgot that, we were toast.

And maybe we’ll throw in a lesser-known guy you’ve never heard of — just to prove that greatness isn’t about fame, it’s about conviction.


The Goal Isn’t to Admire Them — It’s to Imitate Them

These weren’t perfect men. But they were men who took responsibility for themselves, their families, and their future. They didn’t ask for less tyranny — they demanded no babysitter.

And then they built a country around that principle.

So here’s the real challenge:

Stop asking for more freedom — and start living like someone who deserves it.


The Outlaw Faith Wrap-Up

  • Govern yourself.
  • Discipline your body.
  • Guard your mind.
  • Lead your home.
  • Reject lies.
  • Walk in the truth.
  • And when the world offers you a leash, smile and say,

“No thanks. I’m already governed — by something higher.”

That’s Outlaw Faith.
That’s where freedom begins.
That’s how we rebuild what’s been lost.


Next Week: The Men Who Didn’t Need a Babysitter — Meet the Founders Who Built a Republic and Trusted You to Run It.

And the week after that… we dive into the Federalist Papers.

Let’s go.

What Self-Government Actually Looks Like in 2025 (Hint: It’s Not Just Voting)

Alright, outlaws — time for some truth you can’t post on Instagram without getting shadowbanned.

You’ve heard it all week:
Self-government is the foundation of freedom.
But what does that actually look like in 2025? Does it mean voting for the right guy? Reading the Constitution once a year? Buying a Gadsden flag and yelling about liberty at Thanksgiving?

Not quite.

Here’s the real answer:

Self-government is when no one has to babysit you — because you’ve already got yourself handled.

And in a world full of overgrown toddlers with bank accounts, this is revolutionary.


Signs You’re Not Governing Yourself (Yet)

Let’s do a quick spot-check:

  • You can bench 250 but can’t get out of bed without hitting snooze 3 times.
  • You post Bible verses but lose your temper in traffic like Jesus cut you off.
  • You shout “Freedom!” but hand your kids over to a school system that teaches them they’re meat Legos with feelings.
  • You know more about your favorite NFL team’s stats than your kids’ friends’ names.

If that stings, good. It should. Because that’s where real change starts—not in D.C., but in your living room.


Real Self-Government in 2025 Looks Like This:

✅ You own your calendar. You’re not run by impulse, your phone, or Netflix’s autoplay.
✅ You discipline your kids instead of handing them a screen.
✅ You eat food that fuels your body, not food that makes you feel like you just swallowed regret.
✅ You tithe without being asked, show up early without being praised, and tell the truth without checking the room first.
✅ You vote, yes—but you also work, lead, teach, build, give, protect, and correct yourself before anyone else has to.

You want to make tyrants nervous? Raise a family so strong it doesn’t need the state.


What the Bible Calls This

The Bible doesn’t use the word “self-government,” but it describes it constantly:

“The fruit of the Spirit is… self-control.” â€” Galatians 5:23
“Train yourself for godliness.” â€” 1 Timothy 4:7
“Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others.” â€” Philippians 2:4

Translation?
Stop living like a grown-up child and start walking like someone who knows who he belongs to.


So What’s the Play in 2025?

You want to change the world? Don’t start a campaign.
Start a habit.

  • Wake up when your alarm goes off — first try.
  • Read the Bible before your phone.
  • Pray before you post.
  • Lead your kids before their teacher does.
  • Budget your money before the bank calls.
  • Own your sin before someone else has to call you out.

Self-government is quiet, consistent, and completely unsexy. But it’s the difference between men who are free and men who are just unsupervised.


The Outlaw Faith Challenge: Be Un-Governable — Because You’re Already Governed

If the only reason you haven’t wrecked your life is because the rules stop you, you’re not free — you’re just on a leash.
But if you walk upright even when nobody’s watching?
Now you’re dangerous.

Because you don’t need Caesar breathing down your neck to do the right thing.
You’ve already bowed the knee — just not to him.


Tomorrow: The Outlaw Faith Blueprint — Building a Life That Doesn’t Need a Babysitter.

Weak Men, Strong Tyrants — Why Freedom Dies When Men Get Soft

Alright, outlaws—let’s have a painful conversation.

America doesn’t have a government problem. It has a man problem.

Weak men always lead to strong tyrants. Always. It’s the oldest cycle in history:
1️⃣ Strong men build freedom.
2️⃣ Freedom makes life comfortable.
3️⃣ Comfort makes men weak.
4️⃣ Weak men lose freedom.

Congratulations, we’re stuck between steps 3 and 4—and the next phase isn’t fun.

Because here’s the brutal truth:

  • If men won’t govern themselves, someone else will.
  • If men won’t take responsibility, the government will take it for them.
  • If men can’t handle freedom, they will beg to have it taken away.

This is How Tyranny Always Starts

People think tyranny just means tanks rolling down Main Street. But it starts long before that, when men trade self-governance for comfort.

🚨 â€œThe government should make sure I never get sick.”
🚨 â€œThe government should protect me from mean words.”
🚨 â€œThe government should make sure my bad choices don’t have consequences.”

What they’re really saying is:
🚨 â€œI don’t want responsibility—someone else take it for me.”

The Founders knew this would happen if men got lazy.

John Adams:

“A constitution of government, once changed from freedom, can never be restored. Liberty once lost is lost forever.”

If you don’t fight to keep your freedom, you’re already losing it.


History’s Greatest Proof: Rome, America, and the Fall of Manhood

The Roman Empire had this exact cycle:
✅ Strong, disciplined men built it.
❌ Comfortable, lazy men ruined it.
❌ Tyrants walked in and took over.

Sound familiar?

Rome wasn’t conquered by an outside army—it rotted from inside. The moment men stopped leading their homes, defending their values, and taking responsibility, the system collapsed. And guess what? The government stepped in to “fix” everything.

  • The people lost their freedoms.
  • The state took control of everything.
  • A once-great civilization collapsed under its own weakness.

Now look at America.

  • Soft men cry about problems instead of fixing them.
  • Nobody wants to take responsibility, so the state steps in.
  • Every problem leads to more government, not better men.

If we stay on this path, we’re not going to need an invasion—just like Rome didn’t. The real threat isn’t from China, Russia, or some shadowy global elite.

The real enemy is the man in the mirror who refuses to lead.


The Bible’s Warning: Why This Cycle Happens

The Bible saw this coming long before the Founders did.

“You were free, but then you used your freedom as an excuse to serve your own desires.” â€” Galatians 5:13 (paraphrased)

Translation? When men get soft, they trade responsibility for comfort, and comfort for chains.

“My people love it this way. But what will you do in the end?” â€” Jeremiah 5:31

That’s the scariest part. When men give up their leadership, they actually like the control at first—until it’s too late.


How This Ends (Unless We Fix It)

Every weak society thinks they’re different. They always believe, “This time, tyranny won’t happen here.”

But it always does.

“Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create bad times. Bad times create strong men.”

We’re deep into the Weak Men, Bad Times stage. The only question left is whether strong men will rise up before it’s too late.


The Outlaw Faith Challenge: Fix This at Home First

You don’t fix a weak nation by electing a strong leader. You fix it by becoming a strong leader.

✅ Own your role. If you’re a father, husband, worker, citizen—start leading.
✅ Stop blaming the system. Tyranny grows when men refuse to step up.
✅ Get tougher. Physically, mentally, spiritually. Because the soft years are over.

The world doesn’t need whiners or victims. It needs men who refuse to be ruled.


Tomorrow: What Real Self-Government Looks Like in 2025 (Hint: It’s Not Just Voting).