Practical Christianity:  Discernment Under Influence Part 7:  The Practice of Holy Slowness

(Part 7 of 7)

Floatie:  Trained by Practice

Hebrews 5:14  But solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice to distinguish good from evil.(ESV)

Discernment isn’t a personality trait.  It isn’t instinct.  It isn’t suspicion.  It’s training.

The writer of Hebrews says mature believers have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice.

Constant.  Practice.

That means discernment isn’t activated only when controversy erupts.  It’s cultivated daily.

You don’t become steady in a storm by panicking through one.  You become steady by training long before it arrives.

Testing every voice isn’t a reaction.  It’s a discipline.


✒️ Forge:  Holy Slowness in a Loud Age

We live in a fast age.

Fast opinions.  Fast outrage.  Fast affirmation.  Fast allegiance.

Speed is rewarded.  But Scripture rarely moves at the speed of impulse.

James tells us to be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger (James 1:19).

Slowness isn’t weakness.  It’s strength under control.

Holy slowness doesn’t mean indecision.  It means refusing to be rushed into alignment with something you haven’t tested.

It means pausing long enough to ask:

  • What’s actually being said?
  • What does Scripture say?
  • What category does this belong in?
  • What will this produce if embraced?

Slowness frustrates manipulation.  Confusion thrives in haste.  Clarity grows in patience.


⚒️ Anvil:  Living the Discipline

If you would discern His will, begin here.  When you hear a claim:  Don’t react immediately.

Read it in context.  Define the terms.  Compare with Scripture.  Examine your own bias.  Ask if your identity is tied to your conclusion.

Invite correction.  Remain open.  And then act.

Not tentatively.  Not fearfully.  But confidently anchored in what you have tested.

You aren’t called to outsource discernment.  You’re called to practice it.

That includes testing what you’ve read in this series.

Especially what you’ve read in this series.

If anything here fails to align with Scripture, refine it or discard it.

Truth isn’t harmed by examination.  Only error fears testing.


🔥 Ember:  The Quiet Commission

You won’t always be certain.  You will sometimes revise.

You may discover that something you once believed needs sharpening.

That isn’t failure.  That’s growth.

You aren’t required to be infallible.  You’re required to be faithful.

Faithfulness means staying near the Shepherd.  “My sheep hear my voice” (John 10:27).

Hearing requires attentiveness.  Attentiveness requires quiet.  Quiet requires discipline.

Discernment isn’t about spotting enemies.  It’s about staying aligned.

If you remain aligned, drift becomes harder.  Not impossible.  But harder.


🌿 Covenant Triumph:  Rooted and Sent

You’ve now walked through leadership, culture, politics, technology, entertainment, and influence.

None of it can be navigated safely without discernment.

Discernment isn’t defensive.  It’s formative.

It prepares you to live faithfully in a world of competing voices.

You don’t need perfect information.  You need a governed heart.

You don’t need omniscience.  You need obedience under Scripture.

Test every voice.  Test every interpretation.  Test every impulse.  Test every conclusion.

Not with suspicion.  With Scripture.  And then walk forward.  Rooted.  Not rigid.  Confident.  Not arrogant.  Humble.  Not uncertain.

If you practice this, you won’t be carried by every wind.  You won’t be hardened by every disagreement.  You won’t be shaken by every loud voice.

You’ll be trained.  And those who are trained can stand.

Test it.


[⚓ Floatie] [✒️ Forge] [⚒️ Anvil] [🔥 Ember] [🌿 Covenant Triumph]
This post follows the Forge Baseline Rule—layered truth for the discerning remnant.

2 responses to “Practical Christianity:  Discernment Under Influence Part 7:  The Practice of Holy Slowness”

  1. RW - Disciple of Yahshua Avatar
    RW – Disciple of Yahshua

    I’ve really enjoyed this series. Practical is exactly right, not pretty, not “spiritual” to the point of exhaustion, but real, down-to-earth ways that help any level of believer, from the beginner to the seasoned. The second sometimes needing more practical input than the first. Discernment is a major tool that many believers never develop. Thank you, I needed this!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Don Avatar
      Don

      Thank you, brother. The Anvil part of this message might be the most important thing written in this entire project.

      You aren’t called to outsource discernment. You’re called to practice it.
      That includes testing what you’ve read in this series.
      Especially what you’ve read in this series.
      If anything here fails to align with Scripture, refine it or discard it.

      Liked by 1 person

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