Admittedly I don’t always feel Brave. I am excited to add Kelly’s book to my TBR pile. Kelly shares how being Brave may look different for each person. I want have the courage to try things even if I may fail and believing that my story is important.
Litfuse gave us permission to share this interview with Kelly. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
God has made us brave, not fearful beings. In a forty-day devotional format, author and blogger Kelly Johnson invites readers to consider a new way of thinking about what it means to be brave and challenges them to seek a greater intimacy with God and the people God has placed in their life.
Through Scripture, stories, prayers, and thought-provoking questions, readers will recognize the seeds of divinely inspired bravery and learn the strength found in community. Using letters of the word brave as a guide, Being Brave highlights what God’s Word has to say about the characteristics of bravery: Bold, Resilient, Authentic, Vulnerable, and Engaged and Empowered by the Spirit.
If you could tell readers one thing about being brave, what would it be?
God has named you brave. Being brave is your birthright as a child of God. You already have everything you need to live a life of passion, sacrifice, meaning, and purpose. You don’t need anything else to be ready. Many of us have been playing it safe when God wants us to be bold and hiding from one another when God wants us to live in community. Courage is more often experienced in community and naming one another brave is the path back to God and to the bigger, braver life we desire.
How might being brave look different for different people?
Being brave or having courage means something different to all of us. We would all agree that a person on a battlefield requires a large degree of bravery. Facing a diagnosis of cancer or sitting with the pain of losing someone you love requires great courage as well. However, the need for bravery is not always black and white. What might be terrifying or hard for some might be easy for others.
For many of us, risking vulnerability and allowing ourselves to be seen as inadequate can be scary. For some of us, we are fearful of the unknown, of loss, of change, of that which we can’t control, of appearing foolish, and of not being abl e to protect those we love. Is being brave in those circumstances even related to the kind of bravery required to lay down your life in a combat zone? What does this other kind of everyday courage look like?
Being brave might include any or all of the following:
- Being willing to move forward, even when I’m scared.
- Living creatively, chasing my dreams, and not settling for safe.
- Being driven more by my curiosity than by my fears.
- Being vulnerable and authentic in my relationships, even though I can’t control the outcome.
- Trusting other people, even though I have been hurt.
- Being honest about who I am and what I want.
- Admitting when I am wrong and taking responsibility for my mistakes.
- Taking risks and being willing to fail.
- Asking for help.
- Believing my story is an important part of the larger story God is telling.
- Embracing progress, not perfection.
How is being authentic and vulnerable a part of being brave?
Authenticity and vulnerability build connection. Jesus reminds us the most important commandment is to love God with all our heart and to love one another as we love ourselves. Although God has created us for community, we often hide from each other in our more tender places. Comparison, competition, and perfectionism block connection and keep us stuck believing we are irreparably separated. Authenticity and vulnerability break down those walls and build the connection we long for, the connection for which we were made. Listening to one another, authentically sharing our lives with one another, and naming one another brave is the path back to God and to the bigger, braver life we desire.
Choosing to speak up in times of conflict is brave, but these days, it seems like every topic has the potential to turn into a heated discussion, especially online. How do you choose when to be brave and speak up for what you believe is right and when to take the path of least resistance and remain silent?
Choosing when to speak up and when to remain silent is often a difficult choice. I find I make wiser choices when I stay connected to the power of the Holy Spirit through prayer. Slowing down to seek direction from God in a moment of disagreement, instead of responding impulsively in the heat of strong emotion, I am much more likely to communicate with respect. Whether we speak the truth in love, or choose to remain silent, we can trust God’s spirit of power, love, and self-discipline will be with us and guide us.
Part of the proceeds of the book will be given to The Lamb Center, a ministry in your community. Can you share more about their work and what you have learned about being brave from your service at the center?
Learn more about Being Brave and Kelly Johnson at www.KellyIveyJohnson.com. She is also active on Facebook (KellyJohnsonGraceNotes), Twitter (KellyLJ1), and Instagram (kellylj1).