Locus of Control: The Line Between Faith and Fatalism
Most pastors believe in God’s sovereignty. The question is whether that belief fuels faithful discipline or quietly drifts into fatalism that erodes health, focus, and long term durability.
Most pastors believe in God’s sovereignty. The question is whether that belief fuels faithful discipline or quietly drifts into fatalism that erodes health, focus, and long term durability.
I know the 1% principle works. But most pastors are stuck between "that's brilliant" and "what do I actually do on Tuesday morning?" Here are some examples (and ideas).
Productivity in ministry rarely breaks down because you’re disorganized. It breaks down because people require presence, patience, and time... and rushing them only makes everything slower.
A simple 10-10-10 framework a pastor can use for making decisions. Use this to make decisions you'll feel good about now, later, and years from now.
Your workspace is supposed to help you think, focus, and produce. Instead, it’s quietly robbing you blind... stealing energy, clarity, and hours you’ll never get back. Here’s how to stop the sabotage.
Most pastors are buried under tasks that don’t require their calling... they just require a warm body and a login. The fastest path to freedom isn’t learning "how" to do more, it’s discovering "who" can do it instead.
Perfectionism looks holy until Saturday night turns into a hostage situation. Pastors don’t need more polish; they need more finished. Serve on time this week, improve on purpose next week.
Most pastors waste more time than they think—not because they’re lazy, but because their routines aren’t working for them. In this post, I’ll show you how habit stacking can turn your dead time into discipleship, growth, and even a few muscle gains.
I used to binge on books, podcasts, and courses thinking it made me a better leader—but most of it never saw the light of day. Here's how one simple shift saved my time, cleared my head, and made my ministry actually move forward.
Ministry will test your emotional limits... repeatedly. If you want to keep going strong without losing your joy (or your mind), you need more than prayer and grit… you need a strategy for bounce-back power.
Most pastors don’t need another planner or productivity book. They need a push. The MIA Principle is the action-first mindset top pastors use to destroy procrastination and finally get things moving.
Most pastors assume they’re starting their mornings right—but the reality looks a lot messier. In this post, I’m sharing 3 practical "power hour" frameworks I’m suggesting (and testing) to help reclaim the first hour and lead the day with clarity and purpose.