Friday, May 15, 2026

If You Want To Walk on Water, You Must Get Out of the Boat

 There is a powerful lesson hidden in the stormy waters of Galilee that many Christians never fully understand. We love to talk about faith. We sing about faith. We preach about faith. But faith is more than words spoken inside the safety of the boat. Faith is stepping out when the wind is still blowing, and the waves are still crashing.

The Bible says:

“And Peter answered him and said, Lord, if it be thou, bid me come unto thee on the water.

And he said, Come. And when Peter came down out of the ship, he walked on the water, to go to Jesus.”

— Matthew 14:28–29 KJV

Notice something carefully.

Peter never walked on water while sitting in the boat.

The miracle did not happen in comfort.

The miracle did not happen in safety.

The miracle happened when Peter put one foot over the side and trusted Jesus enough to leave behind what was familiar.

That is where many folks are today spiritually. They want the miracle, but they do not want the risk. They want victory without surrender. They want power without obedience. They want to walk on water while staying dry in the boat.

But it does not work that way.

The Boat of Comfort

That boat represents the comfortable places in our lives.

Sometimes the boat is traditional.

Sometimes the boat is scary.

Sometimes the boat is money.

Sometimes the boat is our reputation.

Sometimes the boat is a dead religion that knows how to talk about God but no longer trusts Him.

Many Christians have built permanent homes inside temporary boats.

They have enough religion to attend church but not enough faith to obey God when He calls them deeper.

The disciples were experienced fishermen. That boat was familiar territory. They understood boats. They understood storms. They understood water. But Jesus called Peter beyond what he understood.

Brother, God will often call you beyond your understanding.

He may call you to forgive somebody who hurt you deeply.

He may call you to preach when you feel unworthy.

He may call you to ask for help when finances are tight.

He may call you to stand for truth when everybody else bows to pressure.

He may call you to trust Him when the doctor shakes his head.

He may call you to walk through suffering while still praising His name.

And the whole time the flesh screams:

“Stay in the boat!”

Illustration — The Farmer and the Fence

I remember hearing about an old farmer who owned a large piece of land. One day, his grandson asked why the cows stayed in the pasture when there was no electric fence.

The old farmer smiled and said, “Because they have learned to fear where the fence used to be.”

That will preach.

Some Christians are still afraid of fences God removed years ago.

Fear keeps them trapped.

Failure keeps them trapped.

Past disappointments keep them trapped.

Old wounds keep them trapped.

But Jesus is still standing out there saying, “Come.”

Faith Is Proven Outside the Boat

Anybody can praise God when the sun is shining.

Anybody can shout when the bills are paid.

Anybody can testify when life is easy.

But real faith steps out during the storm.

The storm did not stop when Peter stepped out.

The wind did not disappear.

The waves did not calm down immediately.

Yet for a few glorious moments, Peter did the impossible because his eyes were fixed on Jesus.

That is still the secret today.

The problem begins when we start looking at the storm more than we look at Christ.

The Scripture says:

“But when he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me.”

— Matthew 14:30 KJV

Peter sank when fear became greater than faith.

And brother, fear will sink you every time.

Fear has stopped more ministries than persecution.

Fear has silenced more Christians than prison bars.

Fear has buried more dreams than failure ever could.

But I love what happens next.

Illustration — The Child Learning to Swim

I once watched a little boy standing at the edge of a swimming pool. His father was in the water with arms stretched wide, saying, “Jump! I’ll catch you!”

The boy hesitated.

He trembled.

He cried.

But finally, he jumped.

Why?

Because he trusted the one calling him more than he feared the water beneath him.

That is Christianity in its simplest form.

Jesus is not asking you to trust the storm.

He is asking you to trust Him.

Even Sinking Saints Can Be Saved

Peter gets criticized for sinking, but let us remember something important:

The other disciples never got out of the boat at all.

I would rather be a wet disciple who tried to walk by faith than a dry disciple who never trusted God enough to step out.

And when Peter began to sink, Jesus did not condemn him.

The Bible says:

“And immediately Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him…”

— Matthew 14:31 KJV

Immediately.

Not eventually.

Not after Peter proved himself worthy.

Not after a lecture.

Jesus reached for him immediately.

Somebody reading this today feels like they are sinking.

Your faith is weak.

Your heart is tired.

The storm has worn you down.

Hear this old country preacher clearly:

If you cry out to Jesus, He will still reach for sinking people.

The Church Must Leave the Boat Again

I fear many churches today have become satisfied with sitting safely in the boat.

We have programs but little power.

Crowds but little conviction.

Entertainment but little surrender.

Religion without risk.

The early church turned the world upside down because they were willing to step out by faith.

They preached when threatened.

They worshipped in prison cells.

They trusted God in persecution.

They followed Jesus no matter the cost.

Meanwhile, modern Christianity often panics if the air conditioner quits working during service.

Brother, the hour is too serious for shallow faith.

The world does not need more spectators in the boat.

The world needs believers willing to step into deep water, trusting Jesus Christ completely.

Final Thought

You cannot experience water-walking faith while chained to the safety of the boat.

At some point, you must trust God enough to obey Him.

Yes, the storm is real.

Yes, the waves are high.

Yes, the wind is strong.

But Jesus is still Lord over every storm.

And if He says “Come,” then the water itself must make a way beneath your feet.

“For we walk by faith, not by sight.”

— 2 Corinthians 5:7 KJV

So I ask you today:

What boat is God asking you to leave behind?

Because if you want to walk on water…

You must get out of the boat.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Gospel Must Still Convict

 There was a time when a preacher could stand behind a worn wooden pulpit, tears in his eyes, and preach on sin, repentance, Heaven, Hell, and salvation, and people would fall under conviction. Men would grip the back of the pew in fear. Women would weep softly into handkerchiefs. Young people would kneel at old-fashioned altars asking God to forgive them and change their lives.

The church did not need fog machines, concert lights, or entertainment to move people. The Holy Ghost did the moving.

Today, many churches are afraid to preach anything that might offend somebody. Sermons have become little more than motivational speeches designed to make people feel comfortable in their sins rather than to convict them. We have raised a generation that wants salvation without repentance, Heaven without holiness, and Christianity without the cross.

The Gospel was never meant to comfort sinners merely in their condition. The Gospel first convicts before it heals. A man will never seek a cure until he first realizes he is sick.

Jesus Himself preached repentance.

“I tell you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.” — Luke 13:3 (KJV)

John the Baptist preached repentance.

Peter preached repentance on the Day of Pentecost.

Paul preached repentance before kings and governors.

Why? Because repentance is the doorway through which transformation enters the human heart.

The modern church often speaks of “accepting Jesus” while saying little about dying to self. But salvation is not merely repeating a prayer while the heart remains unchanged. Salvation is a supernatural work of God that transforms the mind, heart, desires, and direction of a person’s life.

“Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.” — 2 Corinthians 5:17 (KJV)

That does not mean perfection overnight, but it does mean change. When a man truly meets Christ, something happens inside him. The drunkard begins to hate the bottle. The immoral begin to feel conviction. The proud begin to humble themselves. The hateful begin to soften. The worldly begin to hunger for righteousness. Why? Because the Holy Ghost begins transforming the heart.

The problem today is that many want a Savior but not a Lord. They want forgiveness without surrender. They want the crown without the cross.

But true conviction cuts deep before true healing begins.

“For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword…” — Hebrews 4:12 (KJV)

The Word of God is meant to pierce the conscience. It reveals sin. It exposes darkness. It awakens the soul to its condition before a holy God.

Now let me say this carefully. Preaching conviction is not hatred. Warning people about sin is not cruelty. If a bridge is out ahead and a man stands in the road, waving his arms to warn drivers to stop, we do not call him hateful. We call him compassionate. Yet today, many churches are afraid to warn people because society has declared conviction to be judgmental.

Friend, the most loving thing a preacher can do is tell people the truth while there is still time to repent.

“Faithful are the wounds of a friend…” — Proverbs 27:6 (KJV)

Conviction is not meant to destroy a sinner. It is meant to bring him to Christ.

There can be no true repentance without conviction.

There can be no transformation without repentance.

And without transformation, there remains only religion without power.

Paul warned Timothy of a day when people would have:

“a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof” — 2 Timothy 3:5 (KJV)

Brother, I fear we are living in that hour now.

Churches are full, but altars are empty.

People attend services but rarely break before God.

Many know church language but have never experienced true surrender.

What we need again is old-fashioned Holy Ghost conviction. We need preaching that does more than entertain. We need messages that shake men awake to eternity. We need Christians who are not ashamed to preach repentance with tears in their eyes and love in their hearts.

The Gospel is still powerful enough to save.

Still powerful enough to cleanse.

Still powerful enough to transform.

But before the sinner can rejoice in mercy, he must first see his need for it.

David cried:

“Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.” — Psalm 51:10 (KJV)

That is more than religious talk. That is transformation.

And that transformation only begins when a soul stops making excuses, falls before God in repentance, and allows Jesus Christ to change the heart and mind from the inside out.

May God send conviction back to the church again.