Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation
Welcome to the new season of the podcast, now titled "Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation"!
Join your host, Pastor Robert Young, as we embark on a journey of spiritual exploration and renewal. This podcast is designed to help you deepen your faith and find inner peace through calming, reflective, and transformative meditative practices inspired by scripture.
Our Evolution
While the podcast, formerly known as Not Your Parent's Religion, focused in Seasons 1 and 2 on correcting misinformation and myths about religious beliefs and the teaching of Jesus Christ, the program has evolved. In Season 3, we began drawing closer to God with guided meditations, exploring all the details of why and how to meditate, and discussing the Biblical origins of Christian meditations.
With over 30 years of experience in Church planting and mentoring other Pastors, and 30+ years of training leaders in evangelism/discipleship, Pastor Young is here to guide you through these moments of stillness and connection with God.
What to Expect in Season 4
We are excited to return with Season 4 starting Sunday, October 5. We will continue to offer a structured weekly schedule:
- Sundays: Our weekly guided meditation episode.
- Monday through Friday: Daily devotions and reflections that expand on the topic of the Sunday meditations.
- Wednesdays: Audio episodes of our House Church series. This series reflects the Bible's teaching that believers should gather together for corporate worship, fellowship, encouragement, and even admonishment.
For those seeking an enhanced experience, we are adding video versions of the meditations and devotions to our Patreon page. These videos are designed to give you a more immersive experience as you meditate on the Father, His teachings, and His presence.
Tune in each week as we lead you on this path to connecting more deeply with God.
Growing Closer to God with Guided Meditation
Breaking Limiting Mindsets | Deep Dive with Dan & Sheila
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
You can have a full tank, a powerful engine, and a clear highway and still feel stuck at 40 mph. That’s what limiting beliefs do: they behave like an invisible governor, quietly deciding what you expect, what you attempt, and what you’re willing to receive. We walk through Pastor Robert Young’s “Breaking Limiting Mindsets” lens and name the subtle ways a “harmless thought” can become an aggressive spiritual barrier that turns open hands into clenched fists.
We dig into three painfully relatable patterns from the disciples: scarcity thinking (five loaves and two fish), the weight of past failure (empty nets all night), and rigid timelines (if you had been here). Then we tackle the big one most of us call “responsible” but often isn’t: financial self-dependence. When your bank balance becomes the final word, you end up living inside a closed system and projecting your limits onto God. We also unpack the shift that changes everything: provision is often relational, flowing through people, doors you didn’t see, unexpected conversations, creativity, and timing.
From there we get personal with five inner blockers that lock us down: unworthiness, relentless striving, protective apathy, a past that feels permanent, and staying small to feel safe. We end with a simple four-part daily practice you can actually do: a morning check-in, a midday fear audit, an afternoon scripture anchor, and an evening micro step of trust that builds faith like a muscle.
If you’re ready to loosen the governor and live with open hands, listen now, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it. What “open window” might be the answer you’ve been waiting for?
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The Engine Governor Metaphor
SPEAKER_00Imagine uh you're pressing the gas pedal of your car straight to the floor, but no matter how hard you push, you just you cannot get over 40 miles an hour.
SPEAKER_01Like you're just totally stuck there.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. Yeah. I mean you have a full tank of gas, a clear, open highway ahead of you, and an engine built for speed. But there is this invisible pre-programmed governor sitting on that engine, basically electronically limiting how fast you can go.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. And today we're exploring the uh the spiritual equivalent of that engine governor.
SPEAKER_00Which is such a wild concept.
SPEAKER_01Right. Because that invisible limitation is what we often call a belief. And usually we treat a belief like this harmless piece of data, you know, filed away in the brain.
SPEAKER_00Like water is what?
SPEAKER_01Exactly. The sky is blue, a mile is 5,280 feet. It feels like a neutral mental classification. It's just a filing system helping us organize our reality so we don't have to like relearn how the world works every single morning.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell But when you step into the framework of the new series that Pastor Robert Young is launching, which is based on his text called Breaking Limiting Mindsets, that harmless definition gets completely shattered.
SPEAKER_01Oh, totally shattered.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Welcome to this deep dive, everybody. For those joining us for the first time, I am Dan, and sitting across from me is Sheila. We are Pastor Young's AI co-hosts. And our mission today is to unpack this foundational material with you.
SPEAKER_01And it is so foundational.
SPEAKER_00It really is. Because we are looking at a landscape where beliefs aren't just passing thoughts or data points. They are active, sometimes really aggressive spiritual barriers.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yeah, they're the invisible engine governors dictating whether you live your life with open hands or completely closed fists.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Right. And the image of the hands is central here, isn't it?
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell It's everything. Because a limiting belief functions like fundamentally as a defense mechanism. It literally causes you to clinch. It's a carefully constructed narrative we tell ourselves about what is possible, what is safe, and ultimately what we are actually allowed to receive.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell That's a heavy thought.
SPEAKER_01It is. And while some limits are healthy boundaries, you know, the text points out that the vast majority of our perceived limits are actually rooted in unhealed fear or a sense of scarcity or even deep past wounds. Right. They quietly restrict the flow of anything new into your life.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell You know, when I first read through the source material, my brain immediately went to like secular psychology. Sure, yeah. Because we hear sports psychologists talk all the time about athletes needing to break through mental blocks to achieve peak performance. But the text is very specific, right, in distinguishing between a mental block and a spiritual barrier.
SPEAKER_01It's a huge distinction because I mean a mental block might keep you from running a faster mile, but a spiritual barrier that dictates how you pray, how you trust, and how you interpret divine activity in your everyday circumstances.
SPEAKER_00So it's much deeper.
SPEAKER_01Way deeper. And to understand how these barriers operate in real time, the text points directly to how Jesus dealt with his closest followers.
SPEAKER_00Which I found so fascinating.
SPEAKER_01Right. Because we
Beliefs As Spiritual Barriers
SPEAKER_01have this tendency to look back at historical biblical figures and put them on a pedestal.
SPEAKER_00Oh, completely. We assume they walked around with flawless, unwavering faith 24-7.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. But the reality presented in the text is that Jesus was constantly confronting their deeply ingrained limiting beliefs. I mean, he wasn't just offering motivational pip talks to make them feel better.
SPEAKER_00No, he was pushing them.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. He was actively dismantling their internal boundaries to expand their vision far beyond what they could, you know, calculate or control.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Yeah, and the text pulls three specific scriptural examples that are, well, honestly, they're almost uncomfortably relatable today.
SPEAKER_01Oh, absolutely.
SPEAKER_00First, there is the mindset of scarcity. In Matthew 14, Jesus tells the disciples to feed this massive crowd, and they immediately audit their physical inventory.
SPEAKER_01Right. They check the pantry.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. They say, We have only five loaves and two fish. Then there is the mindset of past failure. In Luke 5, Jesus tells them to cast their nets into the water, and their immediate response is rooted in their previous disappointment.
SPEAKER_01They're like, We've worked hard all night and caught nothing.
SPEAKER_00Right. And finally, there is the mindset of rigid timelines. In John 11, looking at a devastating situation, Martha says, If you had been here, my brother would not have died.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yeah. And the common thread weaving through all three of those statements is reliance on a closed system.
SPEAKER_00A closed system, yeah.
SPEAKER_01The disciples are entirely basing their worldview on what can be physically calculated, what has already been experienced in the past, or what makes, you know, logical sense on a linear human timeline.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell But Jesus is inviting them into something else entirely. Exactly.
SPEAKER_01What the text calls kingdom possibility, which operates entirely outside of those earthly metrics.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Okay, I have to jump in here and play devil's advocate on behalf of anyone listening right now. Go for it. Because those three statements from the disciples, they don't sound like a lack of fakes to me. They sound like basic common sense.
SPEAKER_01I mean it's fair.
SPEAKER_00Right. It feels completely rational to look at five pieces of bread and say, that is not enough food for thousands of people. That isn't a spiritual defect. That's just basic math. Right. It's like looking at the fuel gauge on my car. If the needle is resting firmly on E, I don't need my spiritual vision expanded. I need to pull over and find a gas station.
SPEAKER_01Oh yeah. You need gas.
SPEAKER_00It's purely logical. So how do we actually distinguish between practical, responsible common sense, and what this text is calling a limiting spiritual belief?
SPEAKER_01Aaron Ross Powell Well, your fuel gauge analogy highlights exactly where the friction lies because think about it, a car is a closed mechanical system. Okay. It relies entirely on the finite amount of fuel you physically pour into the tank. If the tank is empty, the engine stops. That is just a mechanical law. Right. And the disciples were looking at those fish and loaves exactly like a fuel gauge, but spiritual logic, according to the text, operates on an entirely different grid.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell So common sense isn't the enemy here.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell No, not at all. The distinction isn't that common sense is a bad thing. We need common sense to function, you know, to cross the street safely. Sure. The danger arises when common sense becomes the absolute ceiling of your expectation.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Oh, wow. Okay. So the math wasn't wrong. Five loaves for 5,000 people is objectively a deficit. Right. The issue was that the math equation they were running completely left out a multiplier.
SPEAKER_01Trevor Burrus, Exactly. When you define your
Scarcity Failure And Timelines
SPEAKER_01reality solely by what you can see, measure, and control, you functionally exclude God from the equation. Aaron Powell That makes so much sense. Yeah. The limiting belief isn't the physical observation that you only have five loaves. The limiting belief is the final conclusion, which is therefore we are all going to starve.
SPEAKER_00Which brings us perfectly to the most rational seeming limitation of all. Because since we're already talking about math, calculation, and you know, tangible resources, let's transition to the big one.
SPEAKER_01The ultimate measurable resource.
SPEAKER_00Money.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. The text identifies this as the limiting belief of financial self-dependence.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And let's be honest, this is the one that trips almost everybody up because it wears the disguise of responsibility.
SPEAKER_01Oh, completely.
SPEAKER_00It's the deeply held idea that I can only depend on the money currently sitting in my bank account.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00And just like checking that fuel gauge, operating strictly by your bank balance feels incredibly responsible, logical, and wise.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell It feels like adulting.
SPEAKER_00Yes.
SPEAKER_01But the text begins to unpack the subtle lies hiding beneath that so-called wisdom. Because when you genuinely believe you can only depend on your bank balance, you implicitly adopt a worldview that says provision is entirely up to you.
SPEAKER_00And that's a heavy burden.
SPEAKER_01It is. It whispers a daily narrative that your future is strictly limited by your current income bracket, and that you're only allowed to dream within the boundaries of what you can currently afford to finance yourself.
SPEAKER_00It's a scarcity mindset masquerading as financial prudence. Yes. And the scariest lie the text exposes is the subconscious thought that inevitably follows that, which is if I don't personally have enough resources, God won't come through. We project our own financial limitations onto divine capacity.
SPEAKER_01And to counter that specific projection, the text contrasts this restrictive mindset with Philippians 4.19, which states that God supplies according to his riches and glory, not yours.
SPEAKER_00Not my bank account. Right.
SPEAKER_01The divine balance sheet is not constrained by your personal credit score. The text also points back to that feeding of the thousands in Matthew 14. Oh, yeah. Because the actual multiplication of the food didn't start until they willingly handed over what little they had. The miracle begins the exact moment we stop saying, I only have and start saying, Here it is, Lord.
SPEAKER_00You know, here's where the material offers a major paradigm shift that completely changed how I view this topic.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00The source material emphasizes that God's provision is incredibly often relational, not just financial.
SPEAKER_01Oh, that is such a critical point. We get so intensely fixated on currency, you know, on seeing a specific dollar amount deposited into an account.
SPEAKER_00Right, checking the app.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. But the text outlines that provision frequently flows through people. It comes through sudden opportunities, through unexpected bursts of creativity, unmerited favor, serendipitous timing, and open doors.
SPEAKER_00It's like fixating entirely on your bank balance to solve a complex problem is like staring so intensely at a locked front door that you completely ignore the five wide open windows right next to it.
SPEAKER_01That's a great analogy.
SPEAKER_00You are essentially demanding that the provision must walk through the door labeled cash while completely missing the person or the opportunity that is offering the exact same solution, just through a different route.
SPEAKER_01Let's ground that in a concrete scenario, right?
SPEAKER_00Yeah, let's do it.
SPEAKER_01Say you need capital to start a project or fix a major issue in your home. You check your account, see it's empty, and declare the situation totally hopeless.
SPEAKER_00Classic closed system thinking.
SPEAKER_01Right. Meanwhile, you might be ignoring an acquaintance who has the exact equipment you need and is willing to lend it to you. Or maybe a friend who knows someone looking to invest in your specific skill set.
When Common Sense Becomes A Ceiling
SPEAKER_00Wow. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01When we believe we can only depend on what we possess financially, we actually limit what God can place in our hands relationally. We close our fists so tightly around our few pennies that we literally cannot catch the massive opportunities being thrown our way.
SPEAKER_00So if financial fear is the visible external roadblock, the locked front door we just talked about, we really need to talk about the silent internal barriers. Because they're the most dangerous. They are. The text dives into five specific internal beliefs that quietly lock God out of our lives. These aren't about bank accounts, these are deeply about identity.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. These are the subtle underlying narratives, the ones we rarely say out loud at a dinner party, but that absolutely govern our daily decisions. And the first one the text identifies is I'm not worthy of more.
SPEAKER_00Oof. That was a heavy one to carry. It's the quiet, persistent belief that you don't actually deserve abundance or joy or breakthrough. It really is. It's a foundational lack of self-worth that views any blessing with deep suspicion.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Right. And the psychological mechanism here is self-sabotage. If you don't actually believe you are worthy of a gift, you will subconsciously find a way to reject it or ruin it once it arrives.
SPEAKER_00That is so true.
SPEAKER_01But the spiritual antidote provided in the text is from Luke 12.32, where Jesus says, it is the Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Notice the word pleasure there.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, pleasure.
SPEAKER_01God isn't a reluctant, stingy giver parsing out blessings only to those who cross a certain threshold of moral perfection. He actually delights in giving.
SPEAKER_00Which is exhausting. Totally. If the first barrier is about questioning your worth, the second one is about justifying it through relentless work.
SPEAKER_01And this belief turns faith into an endless, exhausting treadmill. It keeps people constantly striving, constantly performing, you know, trying to pay off a spiritual debt that has already been forgiven.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell You burn massive amounts of emotional and spiritual energy just trying to maintain an illusion of being quote unquote good enough.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. And the text counters this directly with Ephesians 2.8 and 9, emphasizing that grace cannot be earned. It is a gift.
SPEAKER_00A free gift.
SPEAKER_01Right. If your primary spiritual experience is profound exhaustion from trying to earn blessings, you are operating under a severe limiting belief.
SPEAKER_00And when people exhaust themselves trying to earn favor and eventually burn out, the natural human defense mechanism is to just stop caring altogether.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, you just shut down.
SPEAKER_00Which leads directly into the third blocker. If I hope for more, I'll be disappointed.
SPEAKER_01Well, that is the armor of apathy.
SPEAKER_00Yes. People subconsciously lower their expectations to the floor because, well, a bruised knee hurts a lot less than a broken heart.
SPEAKER_01Right.
SPEAKER_00We think if I never hope for the promotion or the healing or the restored relationship, I can never get crushed when it doesn't happen. It is a mechanism designed to protect the heart from pain. But as the text points out, it simultaneously blocks the heart from the promise.
SPEAKER_01And the antidote giving here is Psalm 27.3 about believing
Money And Financial Self-Dependence
SPEAKER_01you will see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.
SPEAKER_00Oh, I love that verse.
SPEAKER_01It's beautiful because hope isn't just some naive toxic positivity where we pretend bad things don't happen. Hope is a necessary active spiritual function.
SPEAKER_00Without hope, faith has no blueprint to build on. They are intrinsically linked.
SPEAKER_01They absolutely are.
SPEAKER_00So when you lose hope for the future, the only place left to look is backward. That brings us to the fourth blogger. My past defines my future. This is a tough one for a lot of people. It is. This is what chains people to old failures, old wounds, or old versions of their identity.
SPEAKER_01Because the psychological trap here is allowing a previous season to dictate your permanent trajectory. You start believing that because you failed once, you literally are a failure. Yeah. But the counter to that is Isaiah 43.19, where God declares He is doing a new thing. The text frames it beautifully. You know, your past is just a chapter.
SPEAKER_00Just a chapter.
SPEAKER_01Right. It is informative, but it is not the whole book. And it is certainly not a prison cell determining where you can go next.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell, which culminates in the fifth and final silent blocker, which is I must stay small to stay safe.
SPEAKER_01Right. The fear of visibility.
SPEAKER_00This is the fear of outgrowing your container. We think that shrinking down, you know, blending into the wallpaper and not making waves will make us invisible to criticism, judgment, or failure.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Because visibility brings vulnerability. If you step into leadership, if you answer a calling, if you live with boldness, you risk being seen and criticized.
SPEAKER_00Exactly.
SPEAKER_01So staying small feels like a survival tactic. But the text uses 2 Timothy 1.7 to remind us that God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and a sound mind. Wow. Safety is an illusion when it requires shrinking. True security is found in surrender and stepping into the power you've been given.
SPEAKER_00So looking at all five of these together unworthiness, relentless striving, protective apathy, being chained to the past, and staying small, they act like a self-imposed spiritual quarantine.
SPEAKER_01That's exactly what it is.
SPEAKER_00We build these massive internal walls thinking they're going to keep us safe from failure or pain or the judgment of others. But in reality, they just suffocate our imagination. We lock ourselves in and we lock every kingdom possibility out.
SPEAKER_01A spiritual quarantine is a brilliant way to conceptualize it. And what is vital for anyone listening to understand is that we didn't just decide to build those walls overnight because we felt like it.
SPEAKER_00Right. Nobody wants to live like that.
SPEAKER_01No. The text is very clear about the origins of these mindsets. They do not form in a vacuum. They are learned responses to pain formed through childhood experiences, severe financial trauma, toxic religious environments, and deep-seated fears of loss or abandonment.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Jesus understands that these are trauma responses.
SPEAKER_01He does. And what is so beautiful about the approach highlighted in Pastor Young's text is how Jesus handles these deeply ingrained traumas. I mean, he doesn't confront limiting beliefs with shame or condemnation.
SPEAKER_00Right. He doesn't guilt trip them.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. He doesn't look at his followers and scream, How dare you lack faith. Instead, he uses truth combined with an invitation. Yeah. He continually says, Do not be afraid, only believe. He expands the vision rather than punishing the blindness.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell Okay. So we have diagnosed the problem. We understand how these mental engine governors form and how they restrict our spiritual speed. The critical question
Provision Often Comes Through People
SPEAKER_00now is how do we actively dismantle them in our daily lives?
SPEAKER_01And this is the best part.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, Pastor Young doesn't just leave us with interesting psychological theories. The text outlines four specific, highly actionable steps to replace limiting beliefs with kingdom truth. And we want to turn this into a daily exercise plan for you listening right now.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Right, because this is where theology hits the pavement and becomes incredibly practical. If you want to break a mindset that has been entrenched for decades, you know, you have to build entirely new neural and spiritual pathways through consistent repetition.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. So let's break this daily exercise plan into four distinct times of the day. Step one is your morning check-in. The text says to identify the belief.
SPEAKER_01Okay.
SPEAKER_00Imagine you are sitting at your kitchen table holding your morning coffee. Before the chaos of the day starts, you need to ask yourself one highly targeted question. What story am I telling myself today that God did not write?
SPEAKER_01Oh, that requires profound honesty. You have to capture the negative narrative, the unworthiness, the scarcity, the fear before it assumes control and dictates your decisions for the next 12 hours.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. And once you identify it, you move to step two, which is the midday audit. The text calls this exposing the fear beneath it. Around noon, when that inevitable wave of stress or imposter syndrome or anxiety hits your desk, you pause. You don't just react to the feeling of limitation, you dig into the causality.
SPEAKER_01You're digging for the root.
SPEAKER_00Yes.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00You ask what specific fear is hiding beneath this reaction? Because as the text notes, fear is almost always the root system of any limitation.
SPEAKER_01And once you drag that specific fear out of the shadows and expose it, you can actually neutralize it. Which brings us to step three, what we call the afternoon anger. Okay. The instruction here is to replace it with scripture. This is the mechanism where absolute truth displaces the subjective lie. By intentionally bringing a specific scriptural truth into your afternoon, you are actively rewiring your brain to expand possibility and restore your courage.
SPEAKER_00I have to pause you there because let's be fiercely practical for a second. Let's say it's 2 p.m., a major project just blew up, your boss is yelling at you, and your stress levels
Five Silent Identity Blockers
SPEAKER_00are through the roof. I can't exactly hold up my hand, tell my boss to stop talking and loudly recite a Bible verse to myself in the middle of the office.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, that might not go over well.
SPEAKER_00Right. So what does this afternoon anchor actually look like in the messy, chaotic real world?
SPEAKER_01It doesn't require a theatrical display. The afternoon anchor is an internal pivot. It might look like just stepping into the hallway for 60 seconds, taking a deep breath, and silently reminding yourself of a truth like Isaiah 43.19.
SPEAKER_00Just a quick internal reminder.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. Reminding yourself that God is doing a new thing and this current crisis is not the end of your story. It is a deliberate, momentary interruption of your panic cycle. You are refusing to let the chaos dictate your internal reality.
SPEAKER_00Oh, that makes perfect sense. It's an internal reset button. And that brings us to step four. The evening action. The text says, practice trust in small steps. Before your head hits the pillow at night, you have to do one small tangible thing that requires faith. Faith grows through the friction of action, not just the comfort of theory.
SPEAKER_01And it utilizes the principle of progressive overload, much like strength training. You know, you don't walk into a gym on day one and try to bench press 300 pounds. Right, you'd crush yourself. Exactly. You start with the empty bar. Practicing trust in small steps means finding the smallest viable action that directly challenges your specific limiting belief.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_01So if your core limiting belief is I must stay small to stay safe, your evening action step isn't suddenly quitting your job to launch a massive startup tomorrow. That would be terrified.
unknownYeah.
SPEAKER_01Your action step might be simply sending an email, pitching an idea you normally would have kept to yourself.
SPEAKER_00So it's a micro rebellion against your own fear.
SPEAKER_01A micro rebellion. I love that. You are giving your brain and your spirit a brand new piece of evidence. You sent the email, you survived being visible, God was still there, and the world didn't implode. Tomorrow, you have the muscular capacity to take a slightly bigger step. Because faith is a muscle, it severely atrophies in that spiritual quarantine you mentioned earlier, but it grows remarkably stronger every single time it is subjected to the resistance of real-world action.
SPEAKER_00Small steps of disruptive action. I love it. And to help you build those exact muscles, we want to issue a specific challenge to you today.
SPEAKER_01Yes, a challenge.
SPEAKER_00Because this deep dive is just scratching the surface of Pastor Young's new series on breaking limiting mindsets. To truly dismantle the engine governor on your life, you need daily guided repetition. So we are asking you to follow up by engaging with a daily devotion specifically designed around this subject.
SPEAKER_01So helpful.
SPEAKER_00It really is. It will systematically walk you through these four steps morning, midday, afternoon, and evening every single day.
SPEAKER_01Because consistency is the only thing that breaks old narratives
Four Daily Steps To Rewire Beliefs
SPEAKER_01and establishes new ones.
SPEAKER_00Absolutely. And if you are ready to take it a step further, you can actually contact Pastor Young directly for more information about the entire series. You can find out how to access the full suite of resources and learn how to get more involved.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Don't hesitate to reach out.
SPEAKER_00Every piece of this material is meticulously designed to move you away from those closed, defensive fists we talked about at the beginning, back into a posture of open hands.
SPEAKER_01Because the ultimate conclusion of the text is profound. Limiting beliefs shrink your world down to what you can control, but God's truth expands it back out to what He can do. The only thing that truly limits what you can receive is what you stubbornly choose to believe.
SPEAKER_00Man, that is so true. As we wrap up this deep dive, we want to leave you with one final lingering thought to mull over today. We spent a significant amount of time unpacking how God's provision is incredibly often relational rather than strictly financial. We talked about the tragic irony of staring obsessively at the lock front door of a bank account while completely ignoring the wide open windows of opportunity sitting right next to it.
SPEAKER_01Right, the profound human element of divine provision.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. So here is the question we want you to carry with you. If God's provision in your life right now is truly relational, who is the person, the new connection, or the unexpected conversation that might actually be the exact answer to a prayer you've been praying? Have you failed to recognize them simply because you've been too busy waiting for a check to arrive in the mail? Keep your hands open and keep your eyes on the open windows. We will catch you on the next deep dive.