Following Jesus daily means learning to live each day with Him, not just thinking about Him when life gets difficult. It is not a religious performance, a perfect morning routine, or a checklist that proves you are spiritual enough. It is a relationship of trust, surrender, obedience, and love that touches the ordinary parts of your life.
As you reflect on this, it may also help to read about what it means to follow Jesus, walk with Jesus every day, and stay faithful to Jesus.
You follow Jesus daily when you keep turning your heart back to Him, listen to His Word, obey what He shows you, depend on His grace, and let His way shape your thoughts, choices, words, habits, and relationships.
That may sound big, and in one sense, it is. Jesus does not call people to add Him as a small part of their life. He says, “Follow Me.” But the beautiful thing is that following Jesus is not something you do by your own strength. He leads. He teaches. He corrects. He forgives. He strengthens. He walks with you.
A daily walk with Jesus is not built in one dramatic moment. It is formed through many small returns to Him.
You return to Him in the morning before the noise takes over.
You return to Him when worry starts speaking louder than faith.
You return to Him when you are tempted to choose your own way.
You return to Him when you fall short.
You return to Him when you do not know what to do next.
And slowly, by grace, your life begins to look less like self-protection and more like trust. Less like chasing control and more like surrender. Less like trying to prove yourself and more like walking with the One who already knows you and loves you.
What Does It Mean to Follow Jesus Daily?
To follow Jesus daily means to live as His disciple in your real life, not only in your beliefs. A disciple is not just someone who agrees with Jesus. A disciple learns from Him, trusts Him, obeys Him, and becomes shaped by Him.
This matters because it is possible to admire Jesus from a distance but not actually follow Him. We can like His teachings, quote His words, sing about Him, and still keep control of the areas He is asking us to surrender.
Following Jesus daily means He is not only your comfort when you are hurting. He is also your Lord when you are choosing.
He is not only the One you pray to when you need help. He is the One you listen to when He corrects your heart.
He is not only the One who forgives your sin. He is the One who leads you out of it.
This does not mean you follow Him perfectly. No sincere Christian follows Jesus without weakness, struggle, distraction, or failure. But it does mean your heart is turned toward Him. You want His way even when your flesh wants another way. You want His truth even when it exposes something in you. You want His presence more than you want to keep pretending everything is fine.
At the center of following Jesus is a simple but life-changing question: “Jesus, what does it look like to walk with You here?”
Not only at church.
Not only during prayer.
Not only when you feel strong.
Here. In this decision. In this conversation. In this temptation. In this waiting season. In this disappointment. In this ordinary day.
Following Jesus Begins With Relationship, Not Routine
Routines can help you follow Jesus, but routines are not the heart of following Jesus.
You can read your Bible every morning and still avoid surrender. You can attend church and still refuse forgiveness. You can pray long prayers and still not trust God with your future. Spiritual habits matter, but they are meant to lead you into deeper relationship with Jesus, not become a substitute for Him.
This is important because many people feel discouraged before they even begin. They think, “I am not disciplined enough. I do not know enough Bible. I keep failing. I am not like those other Christians.”
But Jesus did not call perfect people. He called people to come after Him.
He called fishermen while they were working.
He called sinners who needed mercy.
He called people who misunderstood Him many times.
He called people who would have to learn slowly.
The daily Christian life begins here: Jesus wants your heart before He wants your schedule.
That does not mean your schedule does not matter. It does. What you make time for shapes you. But the goal is not to create a religious life that looks impressive from the outside. The goal is to live close to Jesus in a way that changes who you are becoming.
A person who follows Jesus daily is not simply asking, “Did I complete my spiritual tasks today?”
They are learning to ask, “Am I walking with Jesus today? Am I listening? Am I trusting? Am I surrendering? Am I becoming more like Him?”
That kind of life is deeper than routine. It is relationship.
Start Each Day by Turning Your Heart Toward Jesus
One of the simplest ways to follow Jesus daily is to begin the day by turning your heart toward Him before everything else starts pulling at you.
This does not have to be complicated. It may be a short prayer before you get out of bed. It may be opening Scripture before opening your phone. It may be a quiet moment where you say, “Jesus, I belong to You today. Lead me.”
The point is not the length of the moment. The point is the direction of your heart.
Many days begin with pressure. Messages. Responsibilities. Work. Family needs. News. Worries. Plans. Before we even stand up, our minds can already be carrying tomorrow, yesterday, and ten different possible problems.
Following Jesus daily means you do not let the day define you before you remember who you belong to.
You begin by returning to the truth: Jesus is Lord. God is with you. You are not alone. You are not your anxiety. You are not your failures. You are not your productivity. You are loved, called, forgiven, and led.
A simple morning prayer can sound like this:
“Jesus, I give this day to You. Help me follow You in my thoughts, words, decisions, and reactions. Teach me to trust You, obey You, and stay close to You today.”
That kind of prayer may look small, but it is not small. It is a daily act of surrender.
You are saying, “I do not want to live this day on autopilot. I want to walk with You.”
Listen to Jesus Through His Word
You cannot follow Jesus daily while ignoring His voice. And one of the clearest ways Jesus leads His people is through Scripture.
The Bible is not just information about God. It is where your heart is corrected, comforted, trained, awakened, and re-centered in truth. When you read Scripture, you are not merely learning religious facts. You are learning the heart, will, character, promises, commands, and ways of God.
If you want to follow Jesus daily, you need His Word to shape what feels normal to you.
The world will disciple you if Scripture does not.
Your fears will disciple you.
Your desires will disciple you.
Your wounds will disciple you.
Your culture, feed, entertainment, and habits will all try to shape your thoughts about what matters, what is good, what is worth chasing, and what you should fear.
But Scripture brings you back to the voice of God.
This does not mean you need to read many chapters every day to prove your devotion. Some days you may read a full passage and study deeply. Other days you may sit with one verse and let it search your heart. The goal is not to rush through the Bible. The goal is to let the Bible get into you.
When you read, ask simple questions:
What does this show me about God?
What does this show me about myself?
Is there a promise to trust?
Is there a command to obey?
Is there a sin to confess?
Is there an example to follow or avoid?
How does this point me to Jesus?
A daily walk with Jesus becomes stronger when His Word becomes the voice you return to more than the noise around you.
Pray Honestly Throughout the Day
Following Jesus daily does not only mean having one prayer time and then living the rest of the day disconnected from Him. Prayer is not just a spiritual appointment. It is the ongoing conversation of a dependent heart.
You can pray in the morning, yes. But you can also pray while working, driving, cleaning, waiting, deciding, struggling, or feeling overwhelmed.
You can pray before a difficult conversation.
You can pray when temptation feels strong.
You can pray when you are irritated and about to speak harshly.
You can pray when fear starts rising.
You can pray when you do not know what to do.
You can pray after you sin instead of hiding from God.
Many people think prayer has to sound polished to be real. But some of the most honest prayers are simple:
“Jesus, help me.”
“Lord, I do not know what to do.”
“Father, I am afraid.”
“Forgive me. I need Your mercy.”
“Give me wisdom.”
“Help me obey.”
“Teach me to love this person.”
“Keep my heart close to You.”
Following Jesus daily becomes more natural when you stop treating prayer as a performance and start treating it as relationship.
You do not have to pretend with God. You can bring Him your confusion, weakness, disappointment, weariness, and desire. He already knows. Prayer is where you stop carrying it alone.
Obey the Next Thing Jesus Shows You
Following Jesus daily is not only about learning more. It is about obeying what He shows you.
This is where many people get stuck. They want a deeper relationship with Jesus, but they keep resisting the simple area of obedience right in front of them.
Sometimes the next step is not mysterious.
Forgive that person.
Tell the truth.
Stop feeding that temptation.
Apologize.
Open your Bible again.
Pray instead of spiraling.
Choose humility.
Serve without needing attention.
Be generous.
End the compromise.
Wait instead of forcing your own way.
Following Jesus daily often looks like obeying the next clear thing, not waiting for a dramatic sign about everything else.
This does not mean obedience is always easy. Sometimes it is painful. Sometimes it feels like losing control. Sometimes it means saying no to something your flesh wants. Sometimes it means being misunderstood. Sometimes it means trusting Jesus when your emotions are not caught up yet.
But obedience is not how you earn Jesus’ love. Obedience is how you respond to His love.
That difference matters.
Legalism says, “I obey so God will accept me.”
Grace says, “Because I am accepted in Christ, I want to obey Him.”
Legalism is driven by fear and pride.
Grace-led obedience is driven by love, trust, and surrender.
Jesus does not call you to follow Him because He wants to make your life smaller. He calls you because He is the way to true life. His commands are not there to rob you. They are there to lead you out of what destroys you and into what is good.
Deny Yourself Without Thinking Jesus Is Against You
Jesus said that anyone who wants to come after Him must deny himself, take up his cross daily, and follow Him. That is a serious call. It means following Jesus is not simply adding spiritual comfort to a life still ruled by self.
To deny yourself means you stop treating your desires as the highest authority.
It means your feelings are real, but they are not lord.
Your plans matter, but they are not ultimate.
Your comfort is a gift, but it is not your god.
Your opinions may be strong, but they must submit to truth.
Your dreams may be precious, but they must be surrendered to Jesus.
This can sound frightening at first because we often assume surrender means loss without love. But Jesus is not cruel. He does not ask you to deny yourself because He hates your joy. He asks you to deny the false self that keeps reaching for life apart from Him.
There are things we cling to because we think they will save us, satisfy us, protect us, or prove our worth. But many of those things slowly master us.
Jesus loves us enough to say, “Come after Me. Trust Me more than that.”
Denying yourself daily may look like choosing patience when anger feels easier. It may look like purity when compromise feels comforting. It may look like generosity when fear tells you to hold tightly. It may look like silence when pride wants the last word. It may look like faithfulness when nobody notices.
This is not glamorous. But it is holy.
Daily cross-bearing is often lived in ordinary moments where your will meets the will of Jesus, and by grace, you say, “Not my way, Lord. Yours.”
Follow Jesus in Your Thoughts
A daily walk with Jesus reaches the inner life, not just outward behavior.
Many people focus only on what they do, but Jesus also cares about what is happening in the heart. He cares about the thoughts you rehearse, the fears you feed, the bitterness you protect, the fantasies you entertain, the lies you believe, and the identity you keep agreeing with.
Following Jesus daily means bringing your thought life under His truth.
When you think, “I am alone,” His truth says, “I am with you.”
When you think, “I have ruined everything,” His truth says, “There is mercy and restoration.”
When you think, “I need to control this or I will not be okay,” His truth says, “Trust Me.”
When you think, “My worth depends on success,” His truth says, “You belong to Me.”
This does not mean every anxious or sinful thought disappears instantly. But it does mean you stop letting every thought lead you without question. You learn to pause and ask, “Is this from truth? Is this leading me toward Jesus or away from Him?”
Some thoughts need to be confessed.
Some need to be rejected.
Some need to be replaced with Scripture.
Some need to be brought honestly to God in prayer.
Following Jesus in your thoughts is part of learning to love the Lord with your mind. It is not overthinking. It is surrendering the inner conversation to Him.
Follow Jesus in Your Words
Your words reveal a lot about who is shaping your heart.
Following Jesus daily means letting Him lead the way you speak: to your family, to strangers, to people who frustrate you, to people who cannot benefit you, and even to yourself.
This is not just about avoiding obvious sins like lying, gossip, or cruelty. It is also about learning to speak with grace, patience, truth, courage, and humility.
Ask yourself:
Do my words build up or tear down?
Do I speak differently when I am trying to impress people?
Do I use truth as a weapon instead of speaking it in love?
Do I complain more than I pray?
Do I talk about people in ways I would not say in front of them?
Do I speak to myself in agreement with shame or in agreement with God’s grace?
Following Jesus does not mean becoming fake-nice or avoiding hard truth. Jesus Himself spoke truth clearly. But His words were never careless. He did not speak from insecurity, ego, bitterness, or the need to win approval.
A person following Jesus daily begins to ask, “Lord, set a guard over my mouth. Help my words reflect Your heart.”
That prayer can change a home. It can change a marriage. It can change a workplace. It can change the atmosphere around you.
Follow Jesus in Your Decisions
Following Jesus daily also means bringing your decisions under His leadership.
This includes big decisions, like relationships, work, money, calling, and major life direction. But it also includes small decisions that quietly shape your soul.
What will I give my attention to?
How will I respond to this person?
Will I compromise here?
Will I choose comfort or obedience?
Will I spend this money wisely?
Will I make room for God or keep saying I am too busy?
Will I seek counsel or isolate?
Will I act out of fear or faith?
Many people want God’s guidance for the large decisions while ignoring His wisdom in the daily ones. But daily obedience prepares the heart to discern bigger direction.
If you want to follow Jesus in your decisions, slow down enough to ask:
Does this honor God?
Does this agree with Scripture?
Is this led by love or selfishness?
Am I being driven by fear, pride, lust, greed, revenge, or insecurity?
Have I prayed about this honestly?
Am I willing to obey if God says no?
A surrendered decision is not always the easiest decision. But it is the safest place for your soul because it keeps you under the leadership of Jesus.
Depend on the Holy Spirit, Not Willpower Alone
You cannot follow Jesus daily by willpower alone.
You may be able to force a few habits for a while. You may be able to look disciplined on the outside. But the Christian life is not powered by self-effort. It is life by the Spirit.
The Holy Spirit helps you desire what pleases God. He convicts you when you drift. He strengthens you when you are weak. He brings Scripture to mind. He produces fruit in you that you cannot manufacture on your own: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
This is why following Jesus is not merely behavior management. Jesus is not only trying to make you act better. He is transforming you from the inside.
A helpful daily prayer is:
“Holy Spirit, lead me today. Make me sensitive to Your conviction. Strengthen me to obey Jesus. Produce in me what I cannot produce by myself.”
There will be moments when you feel the quiet tug of conviction. Do not ignore it.
Apologize.
Stop.
Pray.
Walk away.
Tell the truth.
Choose the better thing.
Encourage that person.
Open Scripture.
Surrender the worry.
The more you respond to the Spirit’s leading, the more you learn to recognize His work in your everyday life.
Repent Quickly When You Fall
Following Jesus daily does not mean you will never fall. It means when you do fall, you do not run away from Him.
This is one of the most important parts of the Christian life. Many believers lose days, weeks, or even years because they think failure means they should hide from God. Shame says, “Stay away until you are better.” Grace says, “Come back to Jesus now.”
Repentance is not just feeling bad. It is turning back to God. It is agreeing with Him about sin and returning to His mercy and His way.
Sometimes repentance includes tears. Sometimes it includes confession to another person. Sometimes it includes practical changes. Sometimes it means removing access to something that keeps pulling you into sin. Sometimes it means asking for help instead of pretending you are fine.
But repentance should never be separated from hope.
Jesus does not expose sin to destroy you. He exposes sin to heal, cleanse, free, and restore you.
When you sin, do not make excuses. But also do not despair.
Go to Jesus honestly:
“Lord, I sinned. I was wrong. Forgive me. Cleanse me. Help me turn from this and walk with You.”
Then receive His mercy and take the next step of obedience.
A daily follower of Jesus is not someone who never needs grace. A daily follower of Jesus is someone who keeps returning to grace.
Love People the Way Jesus Teaches You To Love
You cannot separate following Jesus from loving people.
Jesus does not only call us into private devotion. He teaches us to love God and love our neighbor. That means your daily walk with Him will show up in how you treat people.
It will show up in your patience.
It will show up in your forgiveness.
It will show up in your honesty.
It will show up in your compassion.
It will show up in your willingness to serve.
It will show up in how you treat people who are difficult, overlooked, different from you, or unable to repay you.
This is where following Jesus becomes very practical. It is easy to talk about love in general. It is harder to love the person in front of you when you are tired, offended, busy, or misunderstood.
But Jesus forms His love in us through real people, not imaginary situations.
Following Jesus daily may look like listening instead of interrupting. It may look like choosing not to gossip. It may look like helping quietly. It may look like forgiving someone who never fully understood how much they hurt you. It may look like telling the truth with gentleness. It may look like praying for someone instead of resenting them.
This does not mean you have no boundaries. Jesus was loving and truthful. Compassion does not require enabling sin or accepting abuse. But even boundaries can be practiced with a heart that belongs to Christ rather than a heart ruled by hatred.
A simple daily question is: “Jesus, how can I love like You in this situation?”
That question can turn ordinary moments into discipleship.
Follow Jesus When You Feel Weak
There will be days when following Jesus feels natural and joyful. There will also be days when you feel dry, distracted, tired, tempted, numb, or weak.
Do not assume those days mean your faith is fake.
A daily walk with Jesus includes learning to follow Him when your feelings are not strong.
Sometimes faith looks like worship with tears. Sometimes faith looks like opening your Bible when you feel nothing. Sometimes faith looks like whispering, “Lord, help me,” because that is all you have. Sometimes faith looks like not quitting.
The enemy often uses weakness to accuse you:
“If you really loved God, you would feel more.”
“If you were a real Christian, this would be easier.”
“You already failed, so why keep trying?”
But weakness can become a place of deeper dependence. You learn that your walk with Jesus was never held together by your emotional strength. It is held by His grace.
On weak days, keep the steps simple:
Turn to Jesus.
Tell Him the truth.
Receive His mercy.
Do the next obedient thing.
Stay close.
You do not have to feel strong to follow Jesus today. You need to be willing to come to Him.
Follow Jesus When Life Is Busy
Many people want to follow Jesus daily, but they feel like life is too full. Work, family, responsibilities, errands, pressure, and exhaustion can make spiritual life feel like one more thing to manage.
But following Jesus is not limited to quiet mornings and empty schedules.
Yes, it is good to make intentional time for prayer and Scripture. But Jesus also meets you in the middle of ordinary life.
You can follow Him while answering emails.
You can follow Him while caring for your family.
You can follow Him while working hard.
You can follow Him while making meals, paying bills, commuting, studying, cleaning, or serving.
The question is not only, “How do I add more spiritual activities?”
The deeper question is, “How do I become more aware of Jesus in the life I already have?”
You may need to simplify some things. You may need to reduce distractions. You may need to stop saying yes to everything. But do not believe the lie that you cannot follow Jesus until your life becomes quiet.
Following Jesus daily means inviting Him into the actual day you have, not the imaginary perfect day you wish you had.
A Simple Daily Rhythm for Following Jesus
If you want a practical rhythm, keep it simple enough to actually live.
Start with surrender.
Before the day takes over, give yourself to Jesus again. Tell Him the day belongs to Him. Ask Him to lead your thoughts, words, decisions, and reactions.
Listen through Scripture.
Read a passage, even a small one, with a humble heart. Do not only ask, “What does this mean?” Ask, “Lord, how are You leading me through this?”
Pray honestly.
Bring your real heart to God. Do not perform. Talk to Him about your needs, fears, sins, decisions, gratitude, and desires.
Obey the next clear step.
Do not wait until you understand everything. Respond to what Jesus has already shown you.
Stay aware throughout the day.
Pause before decisions. Pray before reacting. Notice conviction. Practice gratitude. Ask for help quickly.
Repent when needed.
If you sin, return to Jesus quickly. Confess, receive mercy, and take the next faithful step.
End the day with reflection.
Before sleeping, look back with God. Where did you see His grace? Where did you resist Him? What do you need to surrender? Thank Him for carrying you.
This rhythm is not a law. It is a guide. The goal is not to become rigid. The goal is to keep returning to Jesus.
Common Mistakes When Trying to Follow Jesus Daily
One mistake is trying to follow Jesus to earn God’s love.
This will exhaust you. You do not obey to become loved by God. In Christ, you obey because you are loved.
Another mistake is waiting until you feel ready.
You do not need to become a stronger person before you follow Jesus. You follow Him because you need Him to make you new.
Another mistake is making the Christian life only private.
Prayer and Scripture matter deeply, but following Jesus must also shape your relationships, decisions, work, money, habits, and words.
Another mistake is confusing failure with final defeat.
You will stumble. But failure is not a reason to stay away from Jesus. It is a reason to return to Him.
Another mistake is comparing your walk with someone else’s.
Some people have walked with Jesus for many years. Some are just beginning. Some are in a season of healing. Some are learning basic obedience again. Do not measure your discipleship by someone else’s pace. Keep your eyes on Jesus.
Another mistake is wanting Jesus as Savior but resisting Him as Lord.
Jesus does not save you so you can remain ruled by everything that once enslaved you. He saves you to bring you into His life, His kingdom, His freedom, and His way.
Bible Verses About Following Jesus Daily
Luke 9:23 shows that following Jesus is a daily call to deny self, take up your cross, and come after Him.
John 10:27 reminds us that Jesus’ sheep hear His voice, He knows them, and they follow Him.
John 15:5 teaches that we can bear fruit only by abiding in Jesus, because apart from Him we can do nothing.
Galatians 5:16 calls believers to walk by the Spirit instead of being ruled by the desires of the flesh.
Colossians 3:17 teaches that whatever we do, in word or deed, should be done in the name of the Lord Jesus.
James 1:22 warns us not to only hear the Word, but to do what it says.
1 John 2:6 says that whoever claims to abide in Him should walk as Jesus walked.
These verses remind us that following Jesus is not only a belief we hold. It is a life we walk, by grace, through faith, in dependence on Him.
How to Follow Jesus Daily When You Do Not Know Where to Start
Start small, but start honestly.
Do not try to rebuild your entire life in one day. Begin by turning toward Jesus today.
Pray one honest prayer.
Read one passage of Scripture.
Obey one thing He has already shown you.
Confess one sin you have been hiding.
Forgive one person you have been holding in bitterness.
Remove one distraction that keeps pulling your heart away.
Ask one trusted believer for encouragement.
Take one step back toward church community if you have been isolated.
Following Jesus daily is not about dramatic intensity for one week and then giving up. It is about steady returning.
Small faithful steps matter because they are not really small when they are steps toward Jesus.
A Prayer to Follow Jesus Daily
Jesus, I want to follow You today.
Not only in my words, but in my heart, my choices, my thoughts, my habits, and my relationships.
Forgive me for the times I want Your comfort but resist Your leadership. Forgive me for trying to live in my own strength, follow my own wisdom, and hold on to control.
Teach me to walk with You in ordinary moments. Help me listen to Your Word, obey Your voice, and respond quickly when the Holy Spirit convicts me.
When I am weak, strengthen me. When I am distracted, bring me back. When I sin, lead me to repentance instead of hiding. When I am afraid, teach me to trust You.
Make my life look more like Yours. Help me love what You love, surrender what You ask me to release, and follow You one step at a time.
I belong to You today.
Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions About Following Jesus Daily
Is following Jesus daily the same as being religious?
Not exactly. Religious habits can be part of following Jesus, but the heart of following Jesus is relationship, trust, surrender, and obedience. You are not just trying to look spiritual. You are learning to live with Jesus as Lord.
What if I keep failing while trying to follow Jesus?
Return to Him quickly. Following Jesus does not mean you never stumble. It means you keep coming back to His mercy, confessing sin, receiving grace, and taking the next step of obedience.
How much Bible should I read every day?
There is no single amount that proves you are faithful. It is better to read a smaller passage with attention and obedience than to rush through many chapters without letting the Word touch your heart. Build consistency, but keep the focus on knowing God and responding to Him.
Can I follow Jesus if I do not feel close to Him?
Yes. Feelings matter, but they are not the foundation of your faith. Some days you may feel close to God, and other days you may feel dry or distracted. Keep turning to Jesus, praying honestly, listening to Scripture, and obeying the next step.
What is the first step to following Jesus daily?
The first step is surrender. Turn your heart toward Jesus and tell Him you want to belong to Him, trust Him, and follow His way. Then take one practical step: pray, read Scripture, confess sin, obey what He has shown you, or ask Him for help.
Final Encouragement
Following Jesus daily is not about proving that you are strong. It is about staying close to the One who is strong enough to lead you.
You will have days when you feel faithful and days when you feel weak. Days when obedience feels joyful and days when surrender feels costly. Days when prayer flows easily and days when all you can say is, “Lord, help me.”
Do not despise those small prayers. Do not despise small steps. Do not despise ordinary obedience.
A life of following Jesus is built one surrendered day at a time.
Today, you do not have to figure out your whole future. You do not have to become perfect overnight. You do not have to carry tomorrow’s grace with today’s strength.
You only need to hear His invitation again:
“Follow Me.”
And by His grace, you can answer:
“Jesus, I will follow You today.”
Related Articles
- What Does It Mean to Follow Jesus? – Clarify the basic call of Jesus before applying it to daily choices.
- How to Walk with Jesus Every Day – Find practical rhythms for walking with Jesus throughout the day.
- What Is True Discipleship? – Go deeper into what biblical discipleship looks like beyond surface habits.
- What Does It Mean to Take Up Your Cross? – Understand the cost of following Jesus without confusing surrender with self-hatred.
- How to Stay Faithful to Jesus – Strengthen steady obedience without turning faithfulness into legalism.
- Prayer to Follow Jesus Faithfully – Pray through the desire to follow Jesus with humility and endurance.




