Do Not Fear Stepping Outside Your Comfort Zone

We are hardwired to seek comfort. For most of human history, this instinct kept us alive. Being uncomfortable from hunger meant you were starving. Your body demanded rest or it would break down from overuse. You sought acceptance from your tribe because being an outcast meant death—whether from enemy tribes, predators, or the psychological toll of isolation.

But here’s the problem: we don’t live in that world anymore. When was the last time you were chased by a saber-toothed tiger? Yet we still operate as if we are. We still avoid discomfort at all costs, and ironically, this instinct that once saved us is now killing us—physically, mentally, and spiritually.

The philosopher Voltaire once said, “History is filled with the sounds of silken slippers going downstairs and wooden shoes coming up.” Hard circumstances create great figures, nations, and empires. Overindulgence in comfort leads to their demise.

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For the Common Good: Using Your Spiritual Gifts

Why the church isn’t meant to be a spectator sport (based on a sermon by Lucas Johnson)

Every Team Needs Every Player

Think about the movie Ocean’s Eleven for a moment. Each member of Danny Ocean’s crew had a specific skill essential to pulling off their elaborate heist—the explosives expert, the tech guy, the con artist. Not everyone could be the explosives expert, and they wouldn’t succeed if they tried.

Or consider the ’90s Chicago Bulls, arguably the greatest basketball team of all time. Michael Jordan was there to win games, Scottie Pippen backed him up, Steve Kerr hit the crucial three-pointers, and Dennis Rodman dominated the rebounds while intimidating opponents. Each player had their unique role.

The same principle applies to your own life—you have specific roles in your family, at work, in your hobbies and organizations. Unfortunately, this understanding of roles and responsibilities doesn’t always carry over to the church.

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Everyday Evangelism: The Power of Vanilla

From a sermon by Lucas Johnson

What is your favorite flavor of ice cream? Most people want to answer with fun, exciting, or unique flavors. Hardly anyone ever answers “vanilla” for fear of being labeled boring or basic.

The fact is most of us are pretty “vanilla.” And that’s not how we want to be described, right? We’d rather be strawberry swirl or Rocky Road. When we think of interesting people, we picture someone like Louis L’Amour, who traveled across the West, worked in mines, sailed the seas, and served in World War II—all before he was 30. Or Carroll Shelby, who went from bankrupt chicken farmer to building legendary race cars and winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Sometimes in the church, we look at preachers, missionaries, or traveling evangelists and think, “I don’t have that education. I don’t have those skills. Why would God use just a vanilla, ordinary person like me?”

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From Plumbing Disasters to Purpose: A Biblical View of Work and Success

From Lucas Johnson’s sermon about Work and Success

I spent my formative years working alongside my dad and both grandfathers—manual labor that taught me life lessons I’d never forget. My dad inadvertently taught me I never wanted to be a plumber after we crawled under my aunt’s double-wide to fix a bathtub leak. Picture this: a dirty bathwater bubble trapped in vinyl underneath the trailer that we had to pop. I was convinced I’d drown in that mess, and I knew right then that wasn’t how I wanted to make a living.

My grandfathers taught me about delegation and creative problem-solving—though their methods were… questionable. One had us struggling to move massive tree trunk chunks before casually mentioning his wood splitter could stand upright. The other had me pulling a John Deere horse plow through gravel while he pondered, “How would Abraham Lincoln have done this?”

These experiences shaped how I viewed work, and if you’re from a rural area, you probably have similar stories. Many of us grew up learning that how someone worked defined who they were—their morality, their character, maybe even their eternal destiny.

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Finding God’s Plan for Your Life: When Your Dreams Don’t Match His Design

Originally preached at Tulip Street Church by Lucas Johnson

My plan was never to be a minister. I went to nursing school, dreaming of getting my nurse practitioner’s license and moving to Denver—somewhere with mountains, hip coffee shops, and definitely not Mitchell, Indiana. I’d grown up here and wanted something different.

But while in nursing school, I couldn’t escape ministry. My dad kept volunteering me to fill in at local churches, I started a Sunday school, became a deacon—and no matter how hard I tried to run from it, ministry kept pulling me back. Like Jonah fleeing from Nineveh, I was running from God’s call.

Continue reading → Finding God’s Plan for Your Life: When Your Dreams Don’t Match His Design