Tag: Faith journey

  • Action and Reaction

    Action and Reaction

    Scripture reading: John 12:20—26

    Scientific laws are irrefutable truths, tried, tested, and proven over time, that describe the physical world we live in. Newton’s laws of motion are among the most familiar examples. This year, we have been exploring spiritual truths by linking them to these laws of the natural world.

    In Inertia, we confronted the heart’s resistance to movement—the tendency to remain at rest even when Jesus calls us forward. Comfort disguised as faithfulness. Stillness mistaken for obedience.

    In Newton’s Second Law, we examined the forces that act against movement: the weight of fear, distraction, obligation, and attachment. We learned that even when the desire to follow Jesus is present, these weights can slow acceleration and stall progress.

    Today, we arrive at Newton’s Third Law—Action and Reaction.

    Newton’s Third Law tells us that motion is always the result of interaction: ‘For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction’. When a swimmer pushes water backwards, the water pushes the swimmer forward. When a gun is fired, the bullet moves forward, and the gun recoils backwards with equal force. A rocket is propelled upward only because it pushes gases downward at high speed. An action without a reaction produces no movement, only effort without progress.

    This law shows us something crucial: no object gains momentum in isolation. Momentum is built through relationship. When you walk, your foot pushes backwards against the ground, and the ground pushes forward against you, propelling you ahead. In the same way, when we move toward Jesus, He meets us in that movement. Our obedience is answered with His presence. Our surrender is met with grace. Our weakness is met with strength.

    At times, the call to discipleship can feel draining, like a seed falling into the ground and dying. But be assured: you are not losing at all. In physics, total momentum is conserved because every action has a reaction. Momentum does not disappear; it is transferred. Spiritually, obedience is never wasted. Every step you take toward God changes something—within you and beyond you. Your movement creates ripple effects.

    Jesus says, “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it produces much grain.” Growth can be gruelling. Obedience can be costly. But maturity is not optional—it is the standard we are called toward.

    At its core, today’s scripture speaks about sacrifice. Sacrifice is the giving up of something valuable (like time, comfort, resources, even life) for a higher purpose. A disciple must be willing to lose to gain. This is the wheel around which obedience turns. This is what it means to follow.

    And what gain it is.

    “If anyone serves Me, let him follow Me; and where I am, there My servant will be also. If anyone serves Me, him My Father will honour.”

    Reflection

    Momentum in the Christian life is not built by intensity, but by relationship.

    How can you improve your relationship with Christ through dedicated prayer times, word-study and fellowship?

    Each step toward Christ invites His response. No act of faith is wasted. No sacrifice goes unnoticed. As you reflect today, consider what small, faithful action God may be inviting you to take, not to prove your devotion, but to deepen your walk with Him.

    Prayer

    Lord Jesus, I lay my life before You—my plans, my fears, my desires, and my comforts.
    I surrender my will to Yours, trusting that every step I take toward You is met by Your presence and Your power.
    Teach me to move with You, not by striving alone, but by trusting Your response in every act of obedience.
    Take my hands, my feet, my heart, and use them as You will, even when the path feels uncertain or costly.
    Let my surrender become momentum—a force that carries life, grace, and Your love to others.
    I give You all of me today, Lord, not holding back, not clinging to control, but trusting completely that where You are, I will also be.
    Amen.

  • Newton’s Second Law

    Newton’s Second Law

    Scripture readings: Matthew 4:18 – 22; Mark 10:17 – 22

    Last week, we explored spiritual inertia, the tendency to stay at rest or continue in the same direction unless acted upon by an external force. Many of us experience a sense of spiritual “stuckness,” feeling unable to move toward God’s purpose even when we know His will.

    Newton’s Second Law of Motion teaches that acceleration is produced by a force acting on mass. The greater the mass, the more resistance to movement. Growth is not limited by the strength of God’s call, but by the weight we carry when responding to it.

    Jesus’ invitation in the Gospels is clear and consistent: “Follow me.”  (Matthew 4:19). This call is decisive, directional, and full of authority. Yet not all respond equally. Some accelerate immediately, like Peter, Andrew, James, and John, who left their nets at once. Others, like the rich young ruler, hesitated and walked away. Same call. Different weights. (Mark 10:17–22)

    Think of a shopping cart. An empty cart moves easily with a gentle push. Fill it with heavy groceries, and the same push produces little movement. Spiritually, the cart is our heart, the groceries are our fears, pride, and distractions, and God’s call is the push. Until we unload these weights, acceleration toward God is slow.

    Hebrews 12:1 reminds us: “Let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles.” Weight slows motion. Release it. Fix your eyes on Jesus, and acceleration follows. Hebrews 12:2 urges: “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith.” Direction. When we lay off the weight, and accelerate in the direction of His call, we gain true spiritual momentum.

    Reflection Questions

    1. What weight is slowing your movement toward Jesus?
    2. How would obedience look if you released that weight today?
    3. Are you keeping your eyes fixed on Jesus, or are distractions pulling your direction off-course?

    Prayer

    Lord Jesus,
    You call me to follow with clarity and love.
    Forgive me for the weight I carry that slows my obedience
    Teach me to lay aside what hinders, fix my eyes fully on You, and move immediately when You speak.
    Strengthen my heart to release all that resists Your call.
    Amen.

    Closing Thoughts

    Acceleration is possible, but only when we release what slows us and move in the direction of Christ. God’s call is strong enough. The path is clear. The question is: are you willing to let go, and move?