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Standing up for the everyday

Faithfulness is not about the size of the battlefield, but the willingness to stand when others step back, writes Liam Husband

In the list of David’s mighty men in 2 Samuel 23:8-12 we read of a series of brief moments. We’re not told much about who these men were, where they came from, or how they were trained. What we are shown is how they responded when the pressure came on. Each story captures a single decision that revealed character.

Among these accounts is one that stands out for how unremarkable it appears. No famous city. No dramatic rescue. Just a man named Shammah, a retreating army, and a field most people would have written off.

Shammah’s moment of courage didn’t take place in a setting of any importance. It happened in a field of lentils. No strategic stronghold. No obvious reward. Just a patch of ground that most people would have considered expendable.

When the Philistines advanced, the others fled. That detail matters. Shammah wasn’t defending the field alongside a crowd. He stood alone. Not because the field was impressive, but because it mattered. It was provision. It was livelihood. It was ground that had been entrusted to the people of God.

There is something deeply challenging about that. We often assume courage is reserved for dramatic moments, yet Scripture highlights a man who refused to abandon something ordinary. Shammah did not fight for recognition. He fought because walking away would have meant surrendering something God had given.

Many of the most significant battles we face look like this. They don’t announce themselves as heroic. They show up in everyday decisions. Telling the truth when it would be easier to stay quiet. Remaining faithful when no one is watching. Choosing consistency over comfort. These are not the stories that attract attention, but they quietly shape who we become.

It’s tempting to think that small things don’t matter. A field is just a field. A habit is just a habit. A moment is just a moment. But Scripture tells a different story. God often works through what seems unimpressive. What looks like inconvenience to us may be provision in His hands.

Shammah’s stand reminds us that faithfulness is not about the size of the battlefield, but the willingness to stay when others step back. And the text is clear about the outcome: “The Lord brought about a great victory.” Shammah stood his ground, but God gave the result.

What ordinary ground have you been entrusted with? What would it look like to stand your ground? Not because it’s dramatic, but because it matters.

Sometimes the most courageous thing we can do is refuse to walk away from what looks small.


This article first appeared in Direction Magazine. For further details, please click here.

 
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