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DEVOTIONALS

Writer's pictureTrey Steele



I don’t know about you, but in my house, we watch a lot of home improvement shows. I especially love when they take old houses and restore them. Now you may think the whole trend began with people like Chip and Joanna Gaines on the show Fixer Upper, but did you know home improvement shows have been around since 1979? That’s right, the very first home improvement show, This Old House, made its debut in 1979 starring none other than Bob Villa. There’s been quite an evolution over the last four decades. Homeowners used to favor compartment style homes, with interior walls to divide spaces such as the living room, dining room, and kitchen. That’s all over now. Turn on any home improvement or real estate show and I’ll bet within sixty seconds you hear the words, “open concept.” Today the most popular design is one big huge open room with sight lines from the front door through the living room into the kitchen and out the backyard. Open concept. In order to achieve this look with older homes, builders have to knock down as many interior walls as they can. However, there are a group of walls that serve a greater purpose and cannot be knocked down without risking a collapse of the entire home. These are the load bearing walls.


As a coach, I love the term load bearing. I think about a barbell bending across the neck of an athlete as they support two or three times their body weight. I think about a heavy set of dumbbells testing the grip strength of an athlete trying to carry them a few hundred meters. Physical fitness is about learning to bear load. Just like a house has load bearing walls, we have load bearing muscles. All muscles can bear load, but there are some primary muscles in the human body doing the majority of the work. The hamstrings, quads, glutes, delts, and lats all come to mind. Think of them as the primary support structure. A quality weightlifting program will include consistent training focused on your primary support structure. We do this in CrossFit through squats, overhead presses, and floor lifts. As athletes strengthen their primary muscles, they are able to bear more load. What this requires from a practical standpoint is patience and discipline. You must consistently immerse yourself in a quality training program and trust the process.


Patience and discipline are the hallmarks of building spiritual fitness as well. If there’s one thing we know for sure, it’s that life can be hard. If you’ve ever found yourself feeling overwhelmed or anxious or unsure, you’ve no doubt experienced the “load” of life. The question you need to ask is what’s your load bearing support structure for life? All of us have an answer, you just may not have considered the question before. For most people, the default support structure for hard times is themselves. Simply put, they believe they can power through and handle it on their own. Maybe you can relate. I know I can. For much of my adult life this is how I dealt with difficulty. From job loss to divorce to death to major financial struggles, I kept it tight to the vest convinced I could handle it by myself. Instead of crushing my body, it crushed my soul. I had no real foundation not only for handling life but for actually thriving in it despite the difficulty. You would have never known from the outside. I had what we call in the gym “show muscles.” I had a big income, a fancy European car, a great home, expensive hobbies, from the outside I looked like I had it all together. But on the inside, I was caving in. The load would eventually become too great to bear and I would find myself in yet another valley, disappointed for failing.


Then one day I finally realized God had a better plan for my life. This wasn’t about trying to figure out how to do it myself, it was about starting to put my faith into the belief that alone I could never do it. I started some new habits, like reading the Bible, serving in my community, and connecting with other people on the same journey as me. Over time, God rebuilt the load bearing support structure for my life. He showed me how to have joy despite pain. He taught me the value of deep friendships and authenticity. Now when life gets tough, which it still does by the way, my soul isn’t crushed anymore. Just like the barbell bending over the neck or the heavy set of dumbbells in the hands, I embrace the load of life because I no longer bear it the way I used to.


Questions for Reflection:


What’s your load bearing support structure for life? Do you have more than one?


Why do most people think the best way to handle life is on their own?

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Writer's pictureTrey Steele



Happy New Year! I hope 2021 brings you more peace, joy, and fulfillment than any other year of your life. People were so eager to get to the new year, and we all know why. New Year’s mean new opportunities – a chance to implement changes in our lives destined to lead to incredible outcomes. At least in our heads anyway! Who among us hasn’t fantasized about being debt free or making more money or leading the best team or losing the most weight? And how do most people take on these daunting tasks? Yes, the dreaded resolutions. “This year I resolve to…” I get it, you need a starting point, and for many Americans, the resolution is it. But is there a better way? I propose another method exists, one more applicably suited for the goal of transformation and life change. If you really want to change your life, don’t make a resolution, change a rhythm.


Believe it or not, you’ve got rhythm. Yes, even you sir. We’ve got rhythms we’re living into every day. Think of them as the cogs by which your world turns. There’s the rhythm of work, which is moving back into motion although so many are still working from home and meeting by Zoom. You’ve got a home rhythm, when your family eats meals, who is responsible for household chores, and all the other things. Then there’s your life rhythm. This is how you care for yourself, things like exercise, time with friends, meditation, and prayer. When you make a resolution to do something big, like say run a marathon or complete Murph in under 40 minutes, what you may not be prepared for is the disruption it’s going to cause. Deciding on Friday that you’re going sugar free for 30 days the following Monday is not setting yourself up for success. The reason is you haven’t looked at the impact on your established rhythms. Additional exercise means additional time in your schedule. What do you plan on reducing in order to take on your new challenge? Cutting out sugar could mean cleaning out the pantry to reduce cravings, or committing to cooking two meals every night, one for you and one for everyone else in your house who’s now apparently against you.


I want you to take on new challenges this year. In fact, I’m going to give you a pretty big one. But I don’t want you to become a February statistic. All the coaches reading this know what I’m talking about. That’s the person who joins the gym in January, commits to five classes a week at 5:30 am, and then posts something to their feed in February like “there’s always next year 2022comeback” If you don’t want to be a February statistic, study the rhythms of your life. Become an expert in understanding where you spend your time and how your life flows. Then figure out how to blend your new challenge into your way of life. What’s going to need to change for you to be successful? How willing are you to change your rhythm for something new?


Speaking of something new, here’s my challenge to you. Read the Bible every day for 365 days. Yep, that’s right, one year. Now, what I did not say is read the entire Bible in 365 days. You could do that, and maybe some of you need to make that a goal this year. What I’m challenging you to do is blend daily Bible reading into your life. Daily Scripture reading has a huge impact on your perspective, a critical component of joy and peace. One of the ways I like to read is topic devotionals. I’ll find a relevant topic for something specific I’m facing in life, and then I’ll dive in and read. I love how the authors tie the content to one or more specific Bible passages. I’ll read those passages and if there’s one that speaks to me, I’ll expand my reading to the chapter containing it. Here’s a link to a devotional on leadership to help get you started.


This year is guaranteed to bring its own challenges. The great news is you now have a formula for navigating them. When life gets rough, don’t resolve to do it on your own. Instead, ask God to show you how to change the rhythm of your life to be in better sync with His will for you. Your daily Bible reading challenge will help get you there.


Questions for Reflection:


What do you want God to do for you this year?


How aware are you of the various rhythms of your life?


To make 2021 your best year, is it more important for you to start a new rhythm or stop an old one?

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Writer's pictureTrey Steele



I’ve heard a few communicators use an illustration of a windshield and a rear-view mirror. The idea is that it’s best to focus on the things in front of you, hence why the windshield is so large, specifically in comparison to a vehicle’s rear-view mirror. I’ve seen the illustration expanded on, talking about how objects in the rear-view mirror grow smaller over time, indicative of the memories of our lives. That’s all pretty good stuff by the way. People who live in the past miss the present and have no hope for the future. But have you ever tried to drive a car with no rear-view mirror? How about the extended family road trip where two weeks of your belongings blocks its view? It’s difficult to drive without a rear-view mirror. Combined with the side mirrors and windshield, it offers the most complete perspective of everything going on around us. I know for many of you, 2020 can’t get in the rear-view mirror fast enough. Yet as we make our way into 2021, I thought it beneficial to share a few things 2020 taught me, before these observations get too far away and disappear from my rear-view.


Balance is a myth – we live in tension

I have wanted to live a balanced life for so long, but never felt I could. Just like we balance tires or our checkbook, I thought I could balance the demands of my personal and professional life. Something just never felt right though. This year I realized we live in tension. It’s about using positive tension to generate new life outcomes.


The end state matters, so what’s yours?

As a goal planner and high achiever, there’s nothing I love more than smashing a goal. As I reflect on much of my life, I realize even though I thought I was crushing it, I wasn’t. There is a greater purpose and fulfillment in life, but until you reorder the end state, you’ll never experience it.


We have spiritual voids only God can fill

Regardless of where people are on the whole “does God exist or not” spectrum, most will agree that humans are more than just physical beings. We have a spiritual nature. Call it a soul, a gut feeling, a heart thing, or any other label you’ve got, there’s something intrinsic to humanity that is both integrated and complex. One of the fittest athletes ever in the history of CrossFit reminded me of the power of surrendering to God.


All people should not have the same access to you

It shouldn’t take a corner office and an administrative assistant to realize how valuable our time really is. Not everyone who’s on your calendar should be on your calendar. Recover the margin in your life and build your accessibility starting with the people most important to you.


Setbacks are platforms for comebacks

Getting knocked down is a part of life, and events in 2020 knocked us down. What if God allowed that setback to prepare you for the biggest comeback of your life? Spiritual Fitness is a transformational process and transformations require pressure. God uses pressure in our life to refine us in the process.


I’m excited for the future ahead. Let me encourage you to take time to reflect on some of what 2020 taught you. Feel free to add your own lessons to this list in the comments below. I pray that God continues to enhance your spiritual perspective on life. I pray that you find more purpose and meaning in the life you’re living. And I pray that others around you would be drawn to their own journey of spiritual fitness by seeing the transformation in yours. God bless and Happy New Year!

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