116 | God Already Answered You — You Just Don’t Like the Answer
Show notes
Key Takeaways:
1. Clarity Isn’t the Problem — Courage Is
Most people who say “I’m still praying about it” already know the answer.
You felt the conviction.
You recognized the nudge.
You knew the next step.
But obedience would require:
disappointing someone
risking failure
being seen
letting go of safety
So instead, we spiritualize hesitation.
Biblical truth:
John 10:27 — “My sheep hear my voice… and they follow me.”
Hearing is not the issue. Following is.
2. When Discernment Becomes a Delay Tactic
Discernment is meant to protect obedience — not postpone it.
But many believers use:
“I just want peace first”
“I’m waiting for confirmation”
“I don’t want to rush God”
…as a way to avoid movement.
Here’s the hard truth:
God rarely gives comfort before obedience.
Peace usually follows obedience — it doesn’t precede it.
Biblical truth:
James 1:22 — “Do not merely listen to the word… do what it says.”
3. Obedience Will Cost You Something — That’s the Point
God’s instructions often confront:
people-pleasing
perfectionism
fear of being misunderstood
desire for control
If obedience doesn’t cost you anything, it’s probably convenience — not calling.
Delay feels safer because it keeps you:
responsible but not accountable
spiritual but unchanged
informed but uncommitted
Biblical truth:
Luke 9:23 — “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves…”
4. You Don’t Need Another Answer — You Need Alignment
God is not obligated to keep repeating Himself.
At some point:
prayer becomes negotiation
journaling becomes justification
waiting becomes hiding
And clarity turns into clutter.
This is the identity moment (especially for introverts):
Introverted women often delay because they want to be certain before being visible — but God builds confidence after obedience, not before.
Biblical truth:
Proverbs 3:5–6 — “Trust in the Lord… do not lean on your own understanding.”
Let’s Take Action:
This episode is incomplete without movement.
1. Name the Answer You’ve Been Avoiding
Ask yourself honestly:
“What did God already tell me — that I’ve been hoping He’d change?”
Write it down. No editing. No softening.
2. Identify the Real Resistance
Finish this sentence:
“I haven’t obeyed because I’m afraid of __________.”
Fear loses power when it’s named.
3. Take the Smallest Step of Obedience
Not the whole plan.
Not the final outcome.
Just the next faithful step:
send the email
make the decision
set the boundary
launch imperfectly
say yes (or no)
God doesn’t bless intentions.
He blesses obedience.
4. Declare This Out Loud
“I don’t need more answers. I need more obedience.”