Faith and Risk: Why Comfort Can Keep Us Stuck
Most of us don’t think of ourselves as risk-takers—we’re just trying to make life feel a little more manageable. But this week at The Journey, we explored how faith and risk are often deeply connected, and how our pursuit of comfort can quietly keep us from the growth God is inviting us into.
This Week’s Sermon: Challenge Over Comfort
Key Takeaways
- Comfort can feel safe, but it can also slowly shrink our lives and our sense of purpose.
- God’s call often comes through our gifts, strengths, and the places others affirm what we’re good at.
- Fear isn’t a sign you’re doing it wrong—it may be a sign God is inviting you into growth.
- Courage isn’t about personality; it’s about trusting God’s presence and taking the next step.
- A changed life usually begins with one small act of faith, not a dramatic leap.
Sermon Highlights: Getting Honest About Faith and Risk (and Why It Matters)
Most of us don’t think of ourselves as “risk people.” We’re just trying to get through the week: work, family, relationships, bills, health, routines. And if we’re honest, a lot of what we want is pretty simple—we want life to feel a little easier, a little less stressful, and a little more manageable.
But what if the thing we reach for—comfort—has more power over us than we realize?
In this week’s teaching at The Journey, we explored how comfort can quietly shape our decisions and limit our growth, not because comfort is evil, but because comfort can become a chair we sink into—where our lives start to shrink and our faith stops moving.
Big Idea of This Week’s Teaching
God doesn’t major in comfort. Instead, God calls ordinary people into courage—inviting us to step out of what’s safe and into what grows us, shapes us, and blesses others.
The invitation isn’t to do something reckless or impulsive. It’s to take the next faithful risk—whatever “risk” looks like for you—trusting that God is with you.
Key Scriptures
Hebrews 11 — A long “hall of faith” that tells story after story of ordinary people saying yes to God, often in the face of fear, ridicule, suffering, and uncertainty. The point isn’t that they were fearless; it’s that they acted in faith anyway.
Joshua 1:9 — God’s words to Joshua in a moment of enormous responsibility: “Be strong and courageous… for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.” In the teaching, this was a direct reminder that courage grows from God’s presence, not our personality.
1. Faith and Risk: Where Do You Land on the Curve?
The message began with a simple exercise: imagine a bell curve showing our predisposition to risk. Some of us are on the “risk-taking” side. We don’t feel much anxiety, we get bored easily, and we’re energized by action, adrenaline, and novelty.
But, others of us are on the “risk-avoiding” side. Even the word “risk” makes us tense. Our brains feel highly sensitive to stress, and we can worry for days over something that seems small to someone else.
And many of us live somewhere in the middle—generally steady, but with certain situations that spike our anxiety.
Here’s what mattered most: your place on the curve doesn’t make you spiritually superior or inferior. It doesn’t prove you have “more faith” or “less faith.” Instead, it just means you’re human, and you’re wired a certain way.
The question isn’t, “Am I brave like someone else?”
The question is, “What would faith look like for me—right where I am?”
2. Why Faith and Risk Feel Uncomfortable
The teaching named something most of us relate to: that “chair” feeling—the place where we shut the world out, dial down our stress, and sink into comfort. Maybe it’s literal: your favorite chair, couch, bed, or screen-time routine, but often it’s internal: our patterns of avoiding anything that might feel hard, uncertain, or exposing.
“There is no growth in comfort—and God is calling us to take the challenge over the chair.”
Comfort can look like:
- Staying in an unfulfilling job because uncertainty feels scary.
- Holding back honest feelings to avoid rejection.
- Shrinking a meaningful goal because failure would hurt.
- Over-preparing because mistakes feel unbearable.
- Staying silent because we don’t want to sound wrong or be judged.
The hard truth is that comfort doesn’t just soothe us—it can shape us. And over time, it can quietly train us to live small.
The pastor put it plainly: there is no growth in comfort.
3. Faith and Risk in God’s Calling
One of the most practical parts of this message was how it described “calling.” Certainly, for many of us, the word “calling” can sound mysterious—like we’re waiting for a dramatic sign, a booming voice, or a lightning-bolt moment.
But the teaching reframed it: often, God’s call begins as we recognize the gifts, skills, and strengths God has already placed in us—and as other people confirm those gifts.
You might not know your “passion” yet, and that’s okay. In fact, the message offered a counter-cultural idea: don’t start with chasing passion. Rather, start with what you’re genuinely good at. Give time and energy to developing that. And often, passion grows as you see that God can use your gifts to serve others.
So here’s a question we were invited to carry:
“What is the subtle but unmistakable reason God made me the way he did?”
If that’s hard to answer alone, the pastor encouraged us to ask a couple trusted people—the ones who are truly for you—and simply listen to what they see in you.
4. The Most Common Response to God’s Call Is Fear
When it comes to faith and risk, fear is often the first response. If God is calling us to serve, grow, and step out of comfort… why don’t we? Because fear shows up.
The teaching was honest: most people don’t respond to God’s calling by saying, “Great! This is exactly what I’ve always wanted!” Most of us respond with resistance.
And we often tell ourselves stories like:
- “God wouldn’t call me to something that scares me.”
- “God wouldn’t ask me to do something I can’t handle.”
But the message pushed back gently: a loving God challenges us. A good Father doesn’t only soothe—He strengthens. God often invites us into things that stretch us, because stretching is how we grow.
And here was a surprising reframe: if there’s a challenge in front of you that could grow you and help others—but you feel afraid—there’s a good chance God is in that challenge.
Fear doesn’t always mean “stop.” Sometimes fear means, “This matters. Pay attention.”
5. Courage Comes From Presence, Not Personality
This is where Joshua 1:9 landed like an anchor: God tells Joshua to be strong and courageous—not because Joshua feels ready, but because God promises to be with him.
That’s the heart of Christian courage. It’s not self-confidence. It’s not pretending you aren’t afraid. It’s trusting you are not alone. Living out faith and risk doesn’t mean being reckless—it means being willing.
“Don’t compare your faith to anyone else. Ask God: ‘What challenge do you have specifically for me?’”
God invites each of us into faith and risk, not comparison or performance.
The teaching also named something freeing: inadequacy isn’t disqualifying—it’s normal. You may feel like you don’t have what it takes. In a way, that’s true. Most callings are bigger than us.
But that’s where faith begins: we lean on God, not on our ego. We move forward while still feeling small. We take the next step while still feeling fear.
Practicing This Week: Simple, Real Steps
Here are a few grace-filled ways to live this out this week—without pressure, comparison, or trying to prove anything.
- Name your “chair.”
Where do you default to comfort when life feels stressful—emotionally, relationally, spiritually? Just noticing it is a powerful first step. - Ask God one honest question each day:
“God, what challenge do you have specifically for me?”
Say it with curiosity, not dread. You’re not trying to force an answer—you’re opening your heart. - Take one small risk to serve.
Not a dramatic leap. A small act of faith: offer to help, volunteer once, have a hard conversation, reach out to someone who’s struggling, share your story, pray with someone, invite a neighbor. - Talk to two people who are “for you.”
Ask: “What do you think God has shaped me to do? Where do you see me come alive?” Listen without arguing. - Come back to Jesus at the table.
If you’re not sure where to start, start here: you receive Christ—and then you carry Christ into the world. Let communion remind you that Jesus meets you with grace before you ever “get it right.”
Questions for Reflection
- Where would you place yourself on the “risk curve,” and how has that shaped your choices lately?
- What’s a meaningful goal you’ve shrunk or delayed because you’re afraid of failing or being judged?
- When fear shows up, do you usually interpret it as “stop” or “pay attention”? Why?
- What do you sense might be God’s invitation for your next small step—right where you are?
- Who are two people you trust enough to ask, “What do you see in me that God might use?”
The hope of this message isn’t that we would become fearless people. The hope is that we would become people who trust Jesus enough to move—even a little—when God calls. You don’t have to compare your faith to anyone else’s. You don’t have to prove yourself. You can simply take your next step with the God who says, “I will be with you wherever you go.”