Your thorn isn’t proof that God has abandoned you
Most of us carry something we’ve begged God to take away. A struggle. A pattern. A recurring failure that makes you wonder if real freedom is even possible for you. In this week’s episode, we pick up where we left off—digging into what it actually looks like to trust God’s story when you’re stuck in the messy middle. And the answer might surprise you. God doesn’t always say yes. Not to Paul. Not to the Israelites. And probably not to you. That’s not bad news—it’s the beginning of real freedom.
God’s grace is sufficient—even when the struggle stays
Paul was one of the most on-fire followers of Jesus who ever lived. He was planting churches, seeing miracles, and watching the kingdom break through. And he still had a thorn in his flesh—something tormenting, something he begged God three times to remove. God’s response? No. My grace is sufficient. That’s not cruelty. That’s an invitation. God’s power, it turns out, is made perfect in weakness. The struggle you can’t shake isn’t evidence that God is done with you. It’s where he’s doing his deepest work.
Look to him—not just away from the problem
The Israelites got offended at God in the wilderness, complained, and faced real consequences. But when they repented, God didn’t remove the snakes. He gave them something to look toward—a bronze serpent on a pole. Sound familiar? Jesus pointed to that same image in John 3:14-15, just before the most quoted verse in the Bible. Repentance isn’t white-knuckling your way to a better version of you. It’s changing the way you think. It’s looking to him. Your struggle is not an indictment. It’s an invitation. Questions worth sitting with: God, what do you want me to know about this? And Jesus, what do you want me to do? Reach out anytime at daron@daronearlewine.com.
Episode Summary:
You’ve begged God to take it away. The sin. The struggle. The thing you can’t seem to beat. And it’s still there. Most of us read that silence as an indictment. Daron walks Coop & PJ through Paul’s thorn in the flesh, the bronze serpent in Numbers 21, and his own three-month wrestling match to show why God’s “no” is actually the path to your freedom.
Key Takeaways:
- Why God’s no to your prayer for change is not rejection but invitation
- Why repentance means changing the way you think, not feeling worse about yourself
- Why understanding why you sin matters more than stopping what you do
Connect with Daron on Social Media:
If this episode hit you in the messy middle, share it with someone who needs the reminder, leave a comment with where you’re feeling stuck, and hit subscribe so you don’t miss Part 2.
Links to the Daron Earlewine Podcast
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EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
Hey, welcome back to The Daron Earlewine Podcast. Daron Earlewine, your host. We’re getting into the second half of the conversation we had in the previous episode about this idea of trusting the story of God when we’re in the messy middle of life. We unpacked in the last episode the idea of Jesus saying, repent and believe, for the kingdom of God is at hand. It’s here.
And the struggle, the wrestling match, the doubt, the indictment, all the different things we get into when our expectations of what the kingdom is supposed to be bringing into our life, what God’s supposed to be doing, how we’re supposed to be behaving, whatever it would be. We get in this place and we find ourselves offended. Offended by God because he’s not doing what we think.
We begin to give what we talked about in the last episode, the side of indictment or invitation. We got done with the episode, PJ and I and Coop thought, this one’s deep into the pool. There’s some heavy emotional and even heavy mental thinking that you go through in this episode. It ended up being about an hour and 15 minute conversation. We thought this might be best to give as two episodes so you can digest the first one and then have time to go deeper in this episode.
This episode we’re going to look at how this played out in the apostle Paul’s life, and even where we see this in the people of Israel in the Old Testament, then bring it to a close. If you haven’t watched the first episode, go back and listen to it first so this one makes sense. If you’re on path with us and you’re ready for the second one, I hope the first episode was encouraging. I hope it was challenging, and that you’re ready to process this next level as we get into the completion of this conversation. What does it look like in this messy middle of the kingdom of God? How do we find the ability to change the way we think and believe to agree with God and what it looks like to live in the kingdom of heaven?
Let’s get into the completion of this conversation on this episode of The Daron Earlewine Podcast. Created on purpose and for purpose.
Let’s go to another story. Paul. I would say he’s probably another all-star in the kingdom. Paul’s out doing all the stuff, the kingdom seeing it break through, planting churches, gospel spreading. And this point in the podcast is entitled “Every Rose Has Its Thorn.”
We’d play the song if it didn’t get a copyright strike. That’s why I sing it. Because anytime I’m in a bar late at night and there might be karaoke there, that’s my karaoke song. Every time. I don’t have an official karaoke song, but I think it would just be “Tequila.” Like the Pee-wee Herman one. Because that’s the only word in the whole entire song. You’re right. That’s all I got. I can nail that one in any key. Bro, that is a brilliant idea. I’m stealing that. That is now my karaoke song.
Everybody else has a story. Paul’s out doing all the stuff that Paul’s supposed to do. Kingdom’s breaking forth. And he says, well, Second Corinthians 12. Prior to verse seven, where we’re going to jump in, he’s telling the story about this guy. They actually think he’s probably talking about himself, but trying to be humble, was caught up into the third heaven. So he’s having these visions. I don’t even know what that means. I haven’t even seen the second heaven. He’s like, I don’t know if I was in the body, out of the body. I don’t know. But I went into the spirit realm, man.
Sorry, I don’t know why Young Guns quotes keep coming back. That’s because it’s the greatest movie ever. But you remember the scene where they think they’ve drank some peyote with Chavez again in the spirit world, and Dirty Steve’s like, hey guys, you see the size of those chickens? And they’re riding through the Indian reservations and he’s like, you can hear my ability to kid talk. They can’t see us, we’re in the spirit world. So he is in the spirit world and he’s like, oh my gosh, you see the size of those chickens. Then he comes back. We have lost it. Somebody has shut the podcast off. We don’t even know.
They edited that part out in Second Corinthians because Paul was like, I saw these chickens. They couldn’t see me because I was in the spirit. Joaquin was there.
So that’s the setup. He’s saying these crazy, cool kingdom things are happening in my life. Then he gets to verse seven. “And to keep me from being puffed up and too much elated by the exceeding greatness of these revelations, there was given me a thorn, a splinter in the flesh, a messenger of Satan, to rack and buffet and harass me, to keep me from being exceedingly exalted. Three times I called upon the Lord and besought him about this and begged that it might depart from me.”
Here’s Paul, seeing the kingdom come, his will be done on earth as it is. He’s healing people, churches are getting planted, amazing miracles. And he’s like, I’ve got an expectation. Messengers of Satan, and whatever this thorn in my flesh, which could have been a physical thing, could have been a spiritual thing. People say he could have had something wrong with his eyes, could have been a viral infection. Some scholars think it actually could have been people that were against him, because of an Old Testament connection. So these people that are against me, whatever, three different times I have begged God, take it away.
And God’s like, no.
We don’t know what the thorn was. What we know is, it was not good. It didn’t feel like kingdom is breaking through. My guess is the mass majority of us have something in our life that we can’t get over yet. It’s a sin. It’s a struggle. It’s unforgiveness. It’s something. Something is tormenting us in our life.
And every time we fail, every time we sin, every time it gets the best of us, every time it deceives our thinking to make us think that how we want to see this happen is better than what God does, and we actually believe that thinking and act on it, then shame, guilt, fear rush in and say, you are indicted. You are fake. You are a hypocrite. You can’t do this. God can’t set you free. You’ll never be healed. You’ll never be better. You are a fraud.
Something in that zip code is what I think every single person listening to this podcast wrestles with regularly in their life.
Have you ever begged and prayed and implored God to change or fix you in some way? Yeah. I heard, Every Man’s Battle, that book from the late nineties, early two thousands. I heard him say, and it’s through a couple of his different books, but every man’s biggest fear is to be found out. To be found out that you’re a fraud. So anybody that says I’ve never begged, I’ve never prayed, I’ve never implored to be changed is fully lying to you, because we all want that. We all need that.
When you have the repentance side of things, when you’re going and your mind is being renewed, you’re seeing things differently. Maybe you’ve had some time with God and he’s given you some good downloads and you’re starting to have a renewed mind. You start to step into the things that God has put in front of you. It’s so easy because you’re extending beyond yourself. God’s pulling you out into waters where you’re not holding onto the side. Now all of a sudden you’re out, it’s a little bit scarier. Then it’s so easy to have that voice come in and say, well, see, I told you, you couldn’t do it anyway.
So now you have this imposter syndrome. Obviously that’s a big word that a lot of people say now, but we have this imposter syndrome met with God asking us to step out beyond what we understand and be renewed in our minds. And it could easily become that rotation. But the minute we realize that we’re out into the waters further than what we understand, we can find ourselves going, God, help me to renew my mind here.
That’s why repent and believe. We have to say that first. Change my thinking. Help me to see it differently. And then when you do, it’s a little easier out there on the waters. That’s why that stuff comes in so easily when God’s pulling you out beyond what you understand.
When we do that, what we usually do is go back to coping mechanisms. I’m out here. We’re trying to figure this thing out. I’m seeing God do breakthrough. And then I start thinking I’m alone. This all depends on me. I can’t figure it out. Bourbon. Spend some money. Look at some porn. Gossip, worry, anxiety. Whatever it is. I’ve got to go cope. Why? Because I started thinking untrue things and I believed them.
Maybe it’s just me, as I grew up in more of a legalistic, religious thing where I thought there was going to be this poof, you know, the magic dragon happens, and I’m entirely sanctified and I never sin again. I had to break myself out of that. But I think we’ve all got some form of it.
Here is Paul. It’s really difficult for you to say he wasn’t a freaking on-fire, sold-out follower of Jesus. He was. And he’s saying, guys, I got this thing in my life. In fact, you go back to Romans 7, where he’s going, dudes, the things I want to stop doing, I don’t stop doing. The things I don’t want to do, I keep doing. The things I want to do, I don’t do. What a wretched man I am.
He’s having this, and maybe he’s talking about the thorn, I don’t know. But in this moment, I’ve got this thing. And then if I have an incorrect view of repentance, what happens is, here’s the thorn, the messenger of Satan. Here’s the sin. Here’s the struggle. Here’s the thing that I can’t seem to get free of. I’m offended because God’s not setting me free. I’m indicting myself because I probably am a failure and a total fraud, and I’m never going to get over this.
If I have the old idea of repentance, here comes Jesus scowling his face going, you better freaking repent, which I hear as, you better start feeling really bad. You better change this right now, because if you can’t fix yourself, you can’t start doing it right and turn and go the other way. Here we are back at the same point because you don’t know how to repent. This was turn 180 and go the other direction. What are you doing? You’re dancing around the fire playing with the devil. You know what? I should probably just send you to hell right now. I’m so tired of you.
That’s not what Jesus is saying at all. Here’s Paul in the same struggle you’re in. Hey, I begged three times. Could you just fix me, God? Could you just make me perfect? Could you make me not make any mistakes anymore? Which would seem like an easy yes from Jesus. The kingdom’s here, and I’m about perfection. But there’s a separation worldview again. No, I’m actually about learning and growing through failure.
So Paul’s begging, make this go away. Make me perfect. Make me not have to struggle with this messenger from Satan. And Jesus says, no.
I feel this so deeply. The times I beg God, God help me not to struggle with this, help me to be better at this. And I keep failing at it, and dudes, for so long, I gave myself such an aggressive indictment. God wants to do it. He would do it if you tried harder. You better white-knuckle this. You’re not doing enough. If you prayed more, if you gave more, if you served more, whatever, you suck as a follower of Jesus. That’s the problem. God’s not saying no to you. You just don’t know how to. You should probably quit. You’re a fraud.
Now, here’s what Jesus says. Hey, I’m begging, begging, begging. No, because my grace, my favor, my loving kindness and my mercy is enough for you. It’s sufficient against any danger. It enables you to bear the trouble manfully, for my strength and my power are made perfect, fulfilled and completed, and show themselves most effectively in your weaknesses.
Hey God, would you make me perfect? Would you take this away? No, I’m not going to, because my grace is sufficient, and actually is enough for you. And my power is actually made perfect in your weakness. So no, I’m not going to take it away. Here’s what I need you to do though. As you’re failing forward, I need you to keep repenting. I need you to change the way you think. The way you think about me, the way you think about yourself, the way you think about others, the way you think about the struggle, because my grace, my mercy, it’s sufficient. It’s enough.
I love that you said failing forward, because when we think about failure, it’s steps backwards. But I texted you and Julie this week about something I was helping fix. Julie’s like, thanks for being so smart at this stuff. And I’m like, you’re welcome. I just know how to break things and figure out how to fix them. That’s failing forward.
The whole time we’ve been talking about this, I keep thinking about Job. He’s not done anything. The flaming arrows, the thorns of Satan, the messengers of Satan, just keep coming as these tests and tests and tests. And he loses every. And what does God say? Better white-knuckle it? Better go work harder so your kids don’t die? His buddies come around and go, indictment against God, and yet against you. Curse God and die, Job. And he says no, because his ways are greater, without even having Jesus in the picture.
I’ve had three conversations this week with friends. One whose ex is hiring a lawyer for custody battles. One whose stepdad fell and broke his hip, who is also going through a divorce and custody battles. The conversations just keep going. And friends whose daughter has a brain tumor and has been in and out of the hospital for over a year and a half, and is now back in, and they don’t know if the tumor is going away. Big life things.
And every single time, before anybody says anything to them, they’re coming back with, but God, we’re trying to trust. We’re trying to trust. We’re trying to be about you. And how hard that is.
Then this pillar of our faith, for Paul to say the same thing. That’s one of the things I love about the Bible. It humanizes all of this stuff. So often we just talk about the great things, but then when we really peel back the layers of the story, we’re all going through it.
Hey, sorry for the interruption here in the podcast, but I wanted to take this moment to invite you into something. If you’ve ever been in a place in your life where you just felt stuck, you felt like maybe you’re spinning your wheels, you’ve been thinking, there’s got to be more for me. I listen to the podcast all the time, and I hear Daron talk about, on purpose and for purpose. I have to discover my purpose. Well, that feeling is right. You do need to. And I want to help you. I want to help be a guide for you to step into who God created you to be. That’s the purpose in the design of what we do with Rogue Collective Coaching.
If you’re curious, or you know, listen, I’m not curious, I know it’s time for me to take action. Here’s your call to action. Go to RogueCollectiveCoaching.com, click the button that says book a discovery call. Jump on a 30 minute conversation with me. We’ll talk about where you are, and if Rogue Collective Coaching is your next step to help you become who you were born to be. RogueCollectiveCoaching.com. Book a discovery call. Can’t wait to chat with you. Let’s get back to the episode.
As I said at the beginning of the episode, indictment or invitation.
Don’t fall away on account of me. Don’t get offended and indict me that I’m failing you. I need you to repent. Change the way you think. I’m still here. It’s not going to be the way you think. For your thorn in your flesh, listen, I’m not rejecting you. I’m not separating from you because of this thorn. I’m actually allowing it. Why? Because I need you to choose invitation. This is not an indictment against you. I need you to change the way you think. I need you to lean in. Why? Because my grace is sufficient.
To every single person listening to the podcast today, hear that. Whatever the struggle, the thorn that you’re in that’s screaming at you, God isn’t for you. You’re alone. You’re a problem. This is judgment against you. You’re indicted. Change the way you think and believe the kingdom is here. It is at work in your life.
I don’t think it’s going to match up to your expectations of how it’s going to work, but I want to invite you, as Jesus is inviting you, to ask the two questions we come back to all the time on the podcast. God, what do you want me to know about this? What do you want me to do?
I got to preach this on Sunday. And I’ve been trying to write shorter sermons, because I can never get a sermon to be 30 minutes long. At this point, if I preach it the way I think I can preach it, I think I can get done right here at about a 30 minute sermon. But I want so bad to teach this next point. So I’m going to have to talk like the Micro Machines fast guy. But with the podcast, we have time.
Check this out, because the tie together is going to be beautiful. God gave this to me as a gift this week. Let’s go to Old Testament real quick. We’ll move quickly. So John the Baptist, Paul, now the entire nation of Israel from the Old Testament. Once again, here’s another God saying no. Israelites are walking towards the promised land, which would be their kingdom. God has set them free. Egypt, the Red Sea, all the stuff, the miracles, the pillar of fire at night. Every day, manna just coming at you. Provided for, protected. They just got done with another battle here at the beginning of where we are.
Numbers 21. Beginning of Numbers 21, they pray, God delivers them from some other enemy. Just winning, winning, winning. Kingdom’s happening, headed to the promised land.
They travel from Mount Hor. Hor. H-O-R. I bet you’re right. I bet it’s in the back of the throat. It’s Hor. Anyway, they’re traveling from this mountain. They’re traveling along the route to the Red Sea to go around. But the people grew impatient on the way. They spoke against God and against Moses and said, why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? There’s no bread, there’s no water, and we detest this miserable food.
They got offended. Look back at the story. Their story is just breakthrough after breakthrough after breakthrough. They just went to battle, very parallel to John the Baptist. He saw all the things, all the things, all the things. Then this moment, this is not what I expected. This is not what I want. God’s providing for me daily. I’m so freaking sick of manna. Saltine crackers. Got to love them. Thanks God for providing all my needs. This is what I wanted. Let’s go back to Egypt. I know we were slaves and they beat the crap out of us. It was the worst. But at least we knew where the water was at. We didn’t have this stupid wafer that we got to eat every day. That’s perfectly made to sustain us and give us all our health benefits. Like the leftovers off the Egyptians’ tables. At least we had some variety. There’s green beans in there. I don’t know. Vegetables. It’s healthy.
They get offended. Indictment. God is not good. He’s not good for us. Then the Lord sent venomous snakes among them. They bit the people, and many Israelites died. Corner turn. Did God send them, or were they there and God got blamed? Was this an indictment? I don’t know. Bottom line is, snakes came in. I heard one guy talk about this. They were probably in that area. Pit vipers are in this area. He explained the way you die from a pit viper bite. Basically all of your organs and blood vessels expand, and then you explode from the inside. That sounds nice. Bad days. They left that part out of Indiana Jones.
The people came to Moses. We sinned when we spoke against the Lord and against you. Pray that the Lord will take the snakes away from us. So Moses prayed for the people. They come back and repent. We’re so sorry. People are dying over here. We did it wrong. We’re sorry. Take the snakes away.
And God goes, no.
What? But we repent. We’re really sorry. We won’t do it again. We promise. We’re turning to go the other way. We’re good. God, we really feel bad about this one. Right. No, I’m not taking the snakes away. Here’s what I want you to do, Moses. Make a snake and put it on a pole, and then anyone who’s bitten can take a look at it and live. So Moses made a bronze snake and put it on the pole. Then when anyone was bitten by the snake and looked at the bronze snake, they lived.
Why not just take away the snakes? The only thing I can think of is, what you just described sounded like my five-year-old. He does something he shouldn’t, and I take it away, and he’s like, I’ll never do it again, trying to get it back. So it’s like a good father thing, but I don’t know.
There’s the natural consequence piece to it. This is the situation that you’re in. But now I need you to look to my provision. This is how I’m doing it. If I just take it away, it’s going to be gone, and you’re going to forget. You’re not going to remember, because here’s all the proof that you can’t do that. You’re complaining about all this other stuff. So here’s a visual representation of adjusting where your mind is focused.
As I’ve read this before, a lot of people could read this and the indictment they bring against God is, the Lord was mad, super pissed, sent the snakes in a vengeful, I will show you for complaining against me. Snakes, kill them all. Then they prayed, and God was like, okay, all right, but I’m not taking them away. I’m still going to leave some penalties so you stupid sheep Israelites can’t figure it out. Stop doing dumb crap. I’d like to smite all of you. I can’t stand you. So the snakes stay. I’m going to give you a little escape with this snake on the pole, but I’m still real mad. That’s how I would feel about this.
You could preach a really good sermon about that and scare the crap out of a bunch of teenagers at a camp, get everybody to come to Christ. What was the haunted house? Hell’s Flames. What happens? Gates Hadn’t Saved. I’m still saved because of that. We’ll stir up a lot of shame and fear and manipulate people into Jesus. That’s what he did all the time. Wait, never.
Here’s what I think God’s doing the entire time, from the very first pages of the Bible to the end. Here’s what God’s trying to do. Hey, I love you so much. Would you trust me? Would you let me be your source? No, we would really, there’s a tree over there with the knowledge of good and evil, which is our own intellect, our own thought, our own power, being sustained on our own. So we’re going to actually go to the tree of our own knowledge and wisdom. Okay, great.
So for the rest of the Bible, what God’s trying to come back and do is, I love you. My grace is sufficient for you. Would you learn to depend on me, that no matter what happens, I’m here, and that if you look to me, that’s where you’ll find your healing.
I think what God’s trying to do here is exactly a combination of what you guys are both saying. If he takes the snakes away, what do they learn? Nothing. Now they may learn, oh, God will get us. Or that he was good in the moment. One little tiny infinitesimal point of time. They didn’t change the way they think. We have to depend on God because he is good. He is sustaining us. He was trying to change the way they think. He was trying to get them to repent.
John 3:16. We know that one. The NFL’s favorite verse. For God so loved the world, gave his one and only Son, whoever believes in him won’t perish. John 3:14. If you went to most people and said, hey, what’s John 3:14 and 15? Most people don’t know that one. They’ve got 16 down pretty good.
Here’s John 3:14 and 15. “Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the wilderness, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes may have eternal life in him. For God so loved the world, he sent his one and only Son. For God didn’t send his Son into the world to condemn it, but to save it through him.”
So you put those two together. God, I’m begging you to just make me different. God, change the whole situation, because I know your perfection is your standard. No, it’s not. It’s actually learning and growing in dependence and insufficiency that you find from me. I didn’t come to condemn you. I came to save you. So just as I didn’t take away the snakes, I’m not taking away every struggle in your life. Here’s what I want you to do. Look to me. Change the way you think and believe. It’s an invitation.
Your struggle, all of the things, they are not an indictment against God and against yourself. They’re an invitation to look to him, to change the way you think, to believe, to step into the kingdom. Trust the story.
Last thought. We’ll close as the band comes up. There’s no way I get through this sermon on Sunday in 30 minutes. Not a chance.
I can’t remember if I told you guys a story on another podcast, but I’m having my own moment in the past three months, begging God, praying. But in the growth I’ve had, I keep coming back to my two questions. God, what do you want me to know about this? What do you want me to do?
So I’m begging. Make me perfect. And I said, God, what do you want me to know about this? I’m battling all the negative emotions. I’m a fraud. You’re the worst. All the things. And God says, what do you want to know about this, God? And I feel like the Holy Spirit says, I’m setting you free.
Okay, good, but I don’t know if you know the context of the prayer, or what’s happening right now. Let me fill you in, God. I’m coming to you, begging you to help me to stop my same struggles. So when I’m coming to you and I’m telling you, I feel held captive. And then your answer is, I’m setting you free. I don’t think you understand what’s happening. I’m begging to be set free, and what you’re saying is, yeah, yeah, yeah, I’m setting you free.
What? What do you want me to know about that? Here’s what God said to me. Here’s the deal, Daron. You understand the what that you’re doing wrong, but you don’t understand why you’re doing it. You don’t understand the way you think.
So yeah, I could do what I do as God, and I could take away your what, the what you’re doing. That’s what you’re coming to me with. But the issue is, you would just find another what as fast as you found this one, because you don’t know why you keep choosing other things than me.
So what I’m doing, you think every time you sin or you fall down or you stumble, you think I’m offended by you. You think I’m separating from you. You think my grace isn’t sufficient. I’m saying no the same way I said no to the Israelites. I’m saying no the same way I said no to John the Baptist. I’m saying no the same way I said no to Paul, because my grace is sufficient.
And what I’m trying to get you to do is repent. I need you to change the way you think, and hopefully eventually, and guess what? You’re leveling up. You’ve got better insight now. As we walk this through, and my grace is sufficient and my power is made perfect in your weakness, soon, someday, you’re going to understand why you’re doing this, or understand why I’m doing this. When you have gotten to that place, you will have agreed with me, you will have repented, and you can believe and walk out of this.
The process you’re in is not an indictment that you’re a failure. It’s the process that I’m setting you free.
So wherever you’re at, whatever you’re wrestling through, here’s the questions I want you to ask. Okay God, seems like you’re saying no. God, I have an indictment against you, because I’m offended that you’re not doing fill in the blank. What do you want me to know about that? Second question, Jesus, what do you want me to do? What do you want me to know about it? Repentance. What do you want me to do? Believe. Repent and believe, because the kingdom of heaven is at hand.
Full circle. That’s good, Daron.
I hope your brain is as blown as ours.
If you want to talk about it, here’s a couple of things you can do. You can email me at daron@daronearlewine.com. If you’ve been listening to what we’re talking about and you think, I would really love to get in a small group of people where I could get coached up on walking this kingdom life, becoming who I was born to be, you can schedule a 30 minute discovery phone call with me at RogueCollectiveCoaching.com. There’s a little button. You click it, and it sets you up to get on a call with me for 30 minutes so we can talk about where you’re at in your story and where you think God might be taking you, and potentially for you to be part of what we call the Five Day Jumpstart to Purpose. Could be a possible deal, or maybe get you some of our other resources, and potentially get in one of our Rogue Collective hives, to have a group of people, a hive, that you walk through this in. Because all of this is key. The strength I get from just our conversations is that we can’t walk this alone. This is a journey we do in community.
We’d love to hear from you. Thank you for downloading this episode. Share it with someone you think would be encouraged by it. You’re sending them good news. Blessed are the feet of the people that bring good news to other people.
Until we talk again, remember these three things. God is for you, not against you. He is near you, not far away. And he’s created you on purpose and for purpose. Thanks for downloading this episode of The Daron Earlewine Podcast.