Brave Enough β 14-Day Women of the Bible Reading Plan
Christian Book Digest Β· Women of the Bible
Brave Enough
A 14-Day Reading Plan on Courage and Faith
You do not have to be fearless to be brave. Not one of the women in this plan was fearless. They were ordinary women who reached a moment that asked everything of them β and they said yes anyway.
Jochebed. Rahab. Deborah. Esther. Mary Magdalene. Priscilla. Six women. Six impossible situations. One truth: the God who called them went with them. He still does. And you are braver than you think.
Brave is not the absence of fear. It is the decision that something matters more than fear. The women in this plan made that decision in wildly different circumstances β a river in Egypt, a city wall in Jericho, a throne room in Persia, an empty tomb at dawn β and in each case, the same truth held: the God who called them went with them.
Week One follows women who acted under pressure β Jochebed who built an ark for her son, Rahab who hid strangers and trusted a scarlet thread, Deborah who rose to lead when no one else would, and Esther who walked into a room that could have killed her. Week Two follows women who spoke what they had seen β Esther naming the enemy, Mary Magdalene announcing the resurrection, Priscilla correcting a brilliant man with quiet precision.
Each day: read the NKJV passage, sit with the reflection, pray the written prayer aloud, and write honestly in your journal. Every day builds. This plan ends not with information β but with a declaration. You are brave enough.
Read the passage
Read it twice. Once for the story. Once for the woman inside it.
Reflect
Read slowly. Pause where something catches you. Stay there.
Pray
Pray the written prayer aloud, then continue in your own words.
Declare
Answer the journal prompt honestly. Day 14 ends with your own brave declaration.
Week One Β· Days 1β7
The Courage to Act
Jochebed built an ark with her hands. Rahab hid strangers and hung a thread in her window. Deborah rose and led when no one else would. Esther dressed for the throne room and walked through the door. This week is about the moment of decision β when the door is in front of you and everything in you wants to retreat. These women walked through it anyway.
Jochebed Β· The Courage of a Mother
The Ark She Built
Exodus 2:1β4
Today’s Scripture
Exodus 2:1β4
“And a man of the house of Levi went and took as wife a daughter of Levi. So the woman conceived and bore a son. And when she saw that he was a beautiful child, she hid him three months. But when she could no longer hide him, she took an ark of bulrushes for him, daubed it with asphalt and pitch, put the child in it, and laid it in the reeds by the river’s bank. And his sister stood afar off, to know what would be done to him.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Jochebed is never given a speaking part in Scripture. She acts. Under Pharaoh’s edict that every Hebrew male infant be drowned in the Nile, she spent three months doing the most dangerous possible thing: keeping her child alive. And then, when hiding was no longer possible, she did something that looks, on the surface, like surrender β but was in reality one of the most courageous acts in the entire Old Testament. She built a tiny ark, waterproofed it by hand, placed her son inside it, and put him in the very river she had been told would kill him.
The Hebrew word for the basket she built β tevah β is the same word used for Noah’s ark. Both arks were built to preserve life in a world that had decreed death. Both were given to waters that could have drowned their cargo. Both were providentially protected. Jochebed’s bravery was not loud. There was no army, no declaration, no recognition. It was the quiet, deliberate courage of a woman who trusted God with the one thing she could not afford to lose β and built something with her hands to give that trust a shape.
Prayer
“Lord, make me brave in the quiet ways β the ones that require no audience. Help me to build what You have asked me to build, entrust to You what You have asked me to release, and trust that what I lay on the water, You will watch over. I cannot always see where the river leads. But You can. And that is enough. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Jochebed’s act of courage was also an act of surrender β she built the ark and then gave it to the river. What have you been holding tightly out of fear that God may be asking you to release? What would it look like to “build the ark” β do your part faithfully β and then let go?
Jochebed Β· What the River Returned
God Completes the Circle
Exodus 2:5β9
Today’s Scripture
Exodus 2:5β9
“Then the daughter of Pharaoh came down to bathe at the river… and when she saw the ark among the reeds, she sent her maid to get it. And when she opened it, she saw the child, and behold, the baby wept. So she had compassion on him, and said, ‘This is one of the Hebrews’ children.’ Then his sister said to Pharaoh’s daughter, ‘Shall I go and call a nurse for you from the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the child for you?’ And Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, ‘Go.’ So the maiden went and called the child’s mother. Then Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, ‘Take this child away and nurse him for me, and I will give you your wages.'”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
The logic of this scene is almost absurd β God so sovereign that Pharaoh’s own daughter draws Moses from the river, a Hebrew slave is paid to nurse her own son, and the very household that decreed the death of Hebrew infants becomes the education and protection of the one who will lead them to freedom. Jochebed’s bravery, which must have felt like madness on the day she let go, becomes the hinge of Israelite history. She gave her son to the river. The river gave him back β and then some.
There is no indication that Jochebed knew this is how it would unfold. She placed him there in faith, not in foreknowledge. What she received back β her son, in her arms, paid for the privilege of nursing him β is a picture of the extravagant way God honors the courage of the surrendered. When you release into His hands what you love most, He does not merely protect it. He returns it transformed, expanded, carrying a purpose larger than you could have designed.
Prayer
“Lord, what I have released to You, I trust You to return in Your time and in Your way. You are not careless with what is given to You β You are lavish with it. I trust the river to Your hands and wait, expectantly, for what You will return. You are the God who completes what He begins. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Has God ever returned to you something you released in faith β in a different or enlarged form than you expected? Write about it. And what are you currently releasing, or being invited to release, that you need to trust completely to His hands?
Rahab Β· The Courage to Choose the Right Side
Before the Walls Fell
Joshua 2:9β13
Today’s Scripture
Joshua 2:9β13
“And she said to the men: ‘I know that the LORD has given you the land, that the terror of you has fallen on us, and that all the inhabitants of the land are fainthearted because of you… the LORD your God, He is God in heaven above and on earth beneath. Now therefore, I beg you, swear to me by the LORD, since I have shown you kindness, that you will also show kindness to my father’s house, and give me a true token, and spare my father, my mother, my brothers, my sisters, and all that they have, and deliver our lives from death.'”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Rahab is one of the most unexpected characters in all of Scripture. She is a Canaanite woman living inside Jericho’s wall. By ethnicity and geography, she is on the wrong side of the story. And yet when the Hebrew spies arrive, something extraordinary happens: she is the one β not a priest, not a king, not a warrior β who delivers the clearest theology in the book of Joshua. “The LORD your God, He is God in heaven above and on earth beneath.” She confessed what others had been slow to articulate, from the other side of the wall.
Her courage was multilayered. She hid strangers at personal risk. She negotiated boldly for her whole family. And she made her defining move not in a moment of full knowledge but in a moment of partial knowledge and complete commitment. She had heard about the God of Israel β she had not met Him, studied Him, or been taught by Him. But what she heard was enough to act on. The bravest choices are often made with only enough light to take the next step.
Prayer
“Lord, Rahab chose You before she had full understanding. She acted on what she had heard, not on what she had seen. Give me that courage β to move toward You with the knowledge I currently have, trusting that You honor the faith-step taken in partial light. Let me not wait for certainty before I act. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Rahab’s bravery began with a conviction: “The LORD your God, He is God in heaven above and on earth beneath.” What conviction about God are you currently living from? And is there a “right side” that conviction is calling you to β a choice, a step β that you have been hesitating to take?
Rahab Β· Faithfulness Remembered
Held by the Scarlet Thread
Joshua 6:22β25
Today’s Scripture
Joshua 6:22β23, 25
“But Joshua had said to the two men who had spied out the country, ‘Go into the harlot’s house, and from there bring out the woman and all that she has, as you swore to her.’ And the young men who had been spies went in and brought out Rahab, her father, her mother, her brothers, and all that she had… So she dwells in Israel to this day, because she hid the messengers whom Joshua sent to spy out Jericho.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
The walls of Jericho fell. Every wall fell β except the section where Rahab’s house stood, with a scarlet cord hanging from her window. The entire fortification of a city crumbles into rubble, and one small thread of color holds a family intact. The scarlet cord she had tied in faith β without knowing what the destruction would look like β did exactly what the messengers had promised. God’s word, kept through two strangers, held its promise to the letter.
The New Testament places Rahab in two remarkable locations: Hebrews 11, the great hall of faith, standing with Abraham and Moses; and Matthew 1, in the genealogy of Jesus, as an ancestor of the Messiah. The woman the world labeled by her lowest chapter, God remembered by her highest moment β the woman who believed and acted when it cost her everything. Your defining chapter, in God’s record, is the one where you chose well.
Prayer
“Lord, You remember the scarlet thread. You remember every act of faith, every courageous step, every moment I chose You at a cost. What looks small in my window, You see. And when the walls fall, what You have marked safe will be safe. I trust the thread. I trust the One who told me to hang it. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Rahab’s defining act was remembered for generations and written into the genealogy of Jesus. What “scarlet thread” moment in your life β the time you chose courage or faith at genuine cost β do you believe God has seen and remembered? Write it as an act of faithful memory.
Deborah Β· Rising When No One Else Will
She Led Anyway
Judges 4:4β9
Today’s Scripture
Judges 4:4β6, 8β9
“Now Deborah, a prophetess, the wife of Lapidoth, was judging Israel at that time… And she sent and called for Barak the son of Abinoam from Kedesh in Naphtali, and said to him, ‘Has not the LORD God of Israel commanded, “Go and deploy troops at Mount Tabor”?’ And Barak said to her, ‘If you will go with me, then I will go; but if you will not go with me, I will not go!’ So she said, ‘I will surely go with you.'”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Deborah sat under a palm tree and judged a nation β which is to say, she was the highest legal and military authority in Israel. She was a prophetess who spoke the word of God. And when the crisis came β when Sisera and his nine hundred iron chariots were terrorizing the northern tribes β she was the one who summoned the general and delivered the military command. Nobody appointed her to this position as a novelty. Israel came to her because she was the one who was there, the one who led, the one whose judgment was worth traveling to hear.
When Barak said he would not go without her, Deborah did not refuse, demur, or redirect. She said “I will surely go with you.” She had the word. She had the plan. And when the person she deputized could not move without her presence, she moved. Deborah is the model of a leader who does not wait to be invited, does not wait for validation, does not make her contribution contingent on others’ confidence in her. She led because the moment required it, because God had equipped her, and because no one else was going to.
Prayer
“Lord, You do not only call the confident β You call the faithful. Where You have placed and equipped me, let me lead. Not waiting for permission that is already given. Not waiting for others to go first. If I am the one You have stationed here β if no one else is going β then I will go. I will surely go. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Is there a situation in your life β a family, a team, a community β where leadership is needed and you have been waiting for someone else to step up? What would it look like to be Deborah today β not because you have all the answers, but because you have the word and you are willing to go?
Deborah Β· Worship That Declares
The Song of Victory
Judges 5:1β3, 7
Today’s Scripture
Judges 5:1β3, 7
“Then Deborah and Barak the son of Abinoam sang on that day, saying: ‘When leaders lead in Israel, when the people willingly offer themselves, bless the LORD! Hear, O kings! Give ear, O princes! I, even I, will sing to the LORD; I will sing praise to the LORD God of Israel… Village life ceased, it ceased in Israel, until I, Deborah, arose, arose a mother in Israel.'”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Judges 5 is one of the oldest pieces of poetry in the Hebrew Bible, possibly composed contemporaneously with the events it describes. Deborah sings β not as a postscript, not as a humble footnote, but as an equal composer and co-vocalist with the general whose army won the battle. And the song begins with something Israel needed to hear: “When leaders lead in Israel, when the people willingly offer themselves, bless the LORD.” She attributes the victory immediately to God, even as she names her role in it. No false modesty. No erasure of her own courage. Just the right order: God’s glory first, then an honest accounting.
The line “until I, Deborah, arose, arose a mother in Israel” is striking. She does not call herself a commander or a judge here. She calls herself a mother. The word implies fierce bonded love for those in her care β not merely directing the people but carrying them. There is a kind of leadership that is mothering: present, sacrificial, and driven by love rather than position. Deborah’s victory song is a declaration of who God is, who she is, and what it looks like when the willing-hearted align with the purposes of God.
Prayer
“Lord, let me be a person who leads and then worships β who accomplishes what You have put in front of me and returns the glory to You immediately. Let my victories be songs about You, not monuments to me. And give me the fierce, bonded love of a leader who is a mother to those she serves. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Write your own “Song of Deborah” β a declaration of something God has done through your courage and willingness. Name the battle. Name His victory. Name your part honestly and without false modesty. Then give Him the glory.
Esther Β· When You Were Made for the Moment
For Such a Time as This
Esther 4:12β16
Today’s Scripture
Esther 4:13β16
“And Mordecai told them to answer Esther: ‘Do not think in your heart that you will escape in the king’s palace any more than all the other Jews. For if you remain completely silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. Yet who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this?’ Then Esther told them to reply to Mordecai: ‘…and so I will go to the king, which is against the law; and if I perish, I perish!'”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Esther had been queen for five years, living in safety with her identity β her Jewishness β carefully concealed. When the edict of annihilation arrived, she had every structural reason to stay silent: approaching the king uninvited carried the penalty of death. Her safety was purchased by her silence. Then Mordecai sent words that cut through every calculation: “who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” He did not promise her success. He pointed her to her position. The question is not whether the task will succeed. The question is whether you were placed here for exactly this.
Her response is one of the most courage-filled sentences in the Bible: “If I perish, I perish.” This is not recklessness β she fasted three days before she went. She prepared, she prayed, she gathered herself before she moved. But the final verdict she gave herself was: the people I love matter more than my safety. That is the definition of brave. Not the absence of fear. Not certainty of outcome. Simply the decision that something β someone β matters more. Every person reading this has been placed in a particular moment, position, and set of relationships. The question is not whether you have been positioned. The question is what you will do with it.
Prayer
“Lord, I have been placed here β in this family, this city, this moment β for purposes I am still discovering. Give me the courage of Esther: the willingness to risk my comfort for the people You have put in my care. I do not need certainty of outcome. I only need to know that You have placed me here. That is enough. And if I perish, I perish. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Where do you sense you have been positioned “for such a time as this” β in a role, a relationship, a community where you have access others don’t? What would Esther’s decision β “if I perish, I perish” β look like in your specific situation?
Week Two Β· Days 8β14
The Courage to Speak
Esther named the enemy in the king’s own banquet hall. Mary Magdalene announced the resurrection to disciples who wouldn’t believe her. Priscilla corrected one of the most eloquent men in the early church β quietly, privately, and precisely. This week is about the moment when what you know must be spoken, and the courage to say it is the act of faith God is asking for.
Esther Β· One Step Into the Impossible
She Went Anyway
Esther 5:1β3
Today’s Scripture
Esther 5:1β3
“Now it happened on the third day that Esther put on her royal robes and stood in the inner court of the king’s palace, across from the king’s house… So it was, when the king saw Queen Esther standing in the court, that she found favor in his sight, and the king held out to Esther the golden scepter that was in his hand. Then Esther went near and touched the top of the scepter. And the king said to her, ‘What do you wish, Queen Esther? What is your request? It shall be given to you β up to half the kingdom!'”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Esther had said it: if I perish, I perish. Now she had to walk through the door. She put on her royal robes β she prepared herself with dignity and intention β and she stood in the court. The text is spare and almost unbearably tense. She stands. The king sees her. He holds out the scepter. In that moment between her standing and his response, the entire fate of the Jewish people hangs. And Esther had already decided, before she took the first step, that she would take it regardless of the outcome.
The “royal robes” are worth pausing on. Esther did not approach the king in disarray or desperation. She dressed for the moment β not to perform, but to honor the weight of what she was doing. There is a lesson here in how we show up to the hard things God calls us to: not casually, not sloppily, as though it doesn’t matter. Esther prepared. She fasted, she prayed, she dressed, and then she walked. Courage always has a threshold. The work is not just the willingness β it is the willingness executed, one deliberate step at a time, into the room you have been afraid to enter.
Prayer
“Lord, I have said yes. Now help me to walk through the door. Give me the dignity of Esther β to show up prepared, intentional, and trusting Your grace to meet me in the room I am afraid to enter. You have gone before me. The scepter is extended. Help me to take the step. Amen.”
Journal prompt: What is the “inner court” you have been afraid to enter β the conversation, the decision, the room that has felt impossible? What would it mean to get dressed β to prepare your spirit β and then simply walk in, trusting God’s favor to meet you there?
Esther Β· The Ask That Changed Everything
Speaking Truth to Power
Esther 7:3β6
Today’s Scripture
Esther 7:3β6
“Then Queen Esther answered and said, ‘If I have found favor in your sight, O king, and if it pleases the king, let my life be given me at my petition, and my people at my request. For we have been sold, my people and I, to be destroyed, to be killed, and to be annihilated…’ So King Ahasuerus answered and said to Queen Esther, ‘Who is he, and where is he, who would dare presume in his heart to do such a thing?’ And Esther said, ‘The adversary and enemy is this wicked Haman!’ So Haman was terrified before the king and queen.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Esther’s speech at the banquet is a masterwork of precision and courage. She begins with her own life: “let my life be given me.” She makes it personal before she makes it political. She identifies herself with her people β “my people and I” β refusing to separate her safety from theirs. And then she names the enemy. Three sentences, and the room changes entirely. She had been hidden her whole life β her identity carefully concealed. Now she speaks it into the most dangerous room available to her.
There is a moment in every act of courage when the hidden thing must finally be named. The silence that kept you safe becomes the silence that allows destruction. Esther’s brave enough moment was not only the walk to the throne room β it was the words she spoke once she was there. Acting and speaking are both required. Getting into the room is only half of it. What you say when you arrive is the other half. Esther said it clearly and without flinching: “The enemy is this wicked Haman.” Nothing ambiguous. Nothing softened. The truth, named.
Prayer
“Lord, there is something I have been keeping hidden β a truth that needs to be spoken, a wrong that needs to be confronted. Give me the timing, the preparation, and the words of Esther. And when the moment comes β in the right room, at the right time β let me speak it clearly and without flinching. Amen.”
Journal prompt: What is the hidden truth that your situation is asking you to name? What is the “Haman” in your story β the force working against what you love β that needs to be spoken aloud? What is stopping you from naming it?
Mary Magdalene Β· The Courage That Stays
The Last to Leave
John 19:25 Β· Mark 15:47
Today’s Scripture
John 19:25 Β· Mark 15:47
“Now there stood by the cross of Jesus His mother, and His mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene.” Β· “And Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joses observed where He was laid.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
The male disciples, with the exception of John, had scattered when Jesus was arrested. Mary Magdalene did not. She stood at the cross. She watched the burial. She noted β carefully, deliberately β where He was laid. The courage she demonstrated was not the courage of battle; it was the courage of presence. She stayed in a moment that every instinct of self-preservation said to flee. She did not have a plan. She had love. And love stayed.
Luke 8:2 tells us Jesus had cast seven demons from Mary Magdalene. Her history, before she met Him, was one of profound darkness and captivity. What He had done for her β the deliverance, the restoration, the dignity He gave back β was the reason she was still there when the others were not. We stay for what we love. We stay for what has changed us. Mary Magdalene’s presence at the cross was not dramatic. It was the most faithful, costly kind of brave: remaining present with suffering when there is nothing you can do to fix it, because love will not let you leave.
Prayer
“Lord, give me the courage to stay. Not just in the victory moments β but at the cross. At the moment of loss and confusion and what looks like the end. Let love hold me in place when fear tells me to flee. I want to be the kind of person who is still there when it matters most. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Who or what has required you to show up in the dark β when nothing was resolved, when there was no good news yet, when your presence was all you had to offer? Write about that. And: whose “cross moment” are you being called to stay beside right now?
Mary Magdalene Β· Weeping Into Worship
The First to See
John 20:11β16
Today’s Scripture
John 20:14β16
“Now when she had said this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, and did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?’ She, supposing Him to be the gardener, said to Him, ‘Sir, if You have carried Him away, tell me where You have laid Him, and I will take Him away.’ Jesus said to her, ‘Mary!’ She turned and said to Him, ‘Rabboni!’ (which is to say, Teacher).”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
She came to the tomb before dawn, in the dark, to perform the only act of love still available to her: to anoint a body. She was not expecting resurrection β she expected death. When the stone was rolled away and the tomb was empty, she did not assume miracle. She assumed theft. Her grief had no room for any other category. She stood outside the tomb weeping, asking the angels and then the apparent gardener where the body had been taken. She was looking for a dead Jesus when a living one was already standing in front of her.
She did not recognize Him until He said her name. “Mary.” One word, spoken the way only one voice ever spoke it β and everything changed. This is the pattern of resurrection recognition: intimate, personal, a single utterance. Jesus did not announce Himself with a title or a sign. He called her by name. And the woman who had come to anoint the dead became, in that moment, the first witness to the risen Christ. The weeping became worship. Grief became the first message of the gospel. He did not wait for someone more credentialed. He spoke her name.
Prayer
“Lord, I have stood in front of an empty tomb and assumed only loss. Speak my name. Call me out of my grief and into the recognition that You are not where I left You β You are already standing, already speaking, already alive in the middle of what I thought was finished. Let my weeping become worship. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Have you ever been looking for Jesus in the wrong place β expecting Him in the form He last appeared to you, while He was already somewhere else, doing something new? Write about that. And: has He ever called your name in a moment of grief? What did that sound like?
Mary Magdalene Β· The Courage to Testify
“I Have Seen the Lord”
John 20:17β18
Today’s Scripture
John 20:17β18
“Jesus said to her, ‘Do not cling to Me, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, “I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.”‘ Mary Magdalene came and told the disciples, ‘I have seen the Lord’ β and that He had spoken these things to her.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Jesus did not choose Peter, James, or John to be the first witness of the resurrection and the first messenger of that news. He chose Mary Magdalene β a woman whose past included seven demons, whose testimony would not be accepted in a first-century Jewish court of law, whose gender placed her at the margins of the religious establishment. The most important news in the history of the world was entrusted to the person the world would have disqualified. This is how God consistently operates: He gives the mission to the one who loves most, not the one who is most credentialed.
Her message was five words: “I have seen the Lord.” Not a theological treatise. Not a formal report. The witness of a person who encountered the living God and could not be silent about it. The Greek word for “seen” β heΕraka β is a perfect tense, meaning she had seen and the seeing continued. The experience was ongoing in her. She carried it into the room where grieving disciples sat, and the world was never the same. Your encounter with the risen Jesus is not primarily an argument to be made. It is a testimony to be given. Five words can be enough.
Prayer
“Lord, You have entrusted the message of Your life to those the world underestimates β including me. Let me not be silent about what I have seen. Not perfectly, not comprehensively β just truly. ‘I have seen the Lord.’ Let me say it to whoever needs to hear it today. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Write your version of “I have seen the Lord” β not what you have been taught about Jesus, but what you have personally witnessed Him do. Write it simply and specifically. That is your testimony. That is the message He has entrusted to you.
Priscilla Β· The Courage to Teach
More Accurately
Acts 18:24β26 Β· Romans 16:3β5
Today’s Scripture
Acts 18:24β26 Β· Romans 16:3β5
“Now a certain Jew named Apollos, born at Alexandria, an eloquent man and mighty in the Scriptures, came to Ephesus… So when Aquila and Priscilla heard him, they took him aside and explained to him the way of God more accurately.” Β· “Greet Priscilla and Aquila, my fellow workers in Christ Jesus, who risked their own necks for my life, to whom not only I give thanks, but also all the churches of the Gentiles.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Apollos was eloquent, learned, and mighty in the Scriptures β the kind of person who draws a crowd and holds it. And Priscilla heard a gap in his theology. He knew only the baptism of John; the fuller revelation of the gospel had not yet reached him. Rather than whispering about it, deferring to someone more credentialed, or assuming it was not her place, Priscilla β named here before her husband, which likely signals she took the lead β took Apollos aside and explained the way of God more accurately. Quietly. Privately. Without announcement. Without waiting for permission to do what she knew needed to be done.
Paul calls Priscilla and Aquila his “fellow workers in Christ Jesus” β the same term he uses for his closest ministry partners. He says they “risked their own necks” for his life β a phrase pointing to real physical danger. This is not a decorative mention. Priscilla was a serious theological voice, a risk-taker, a teacher of eloquent men, and a woman whose influence extended to all the churches of the Gentiles. The courage she exercised was not dramatic β it was persistent, quiet, consistent, and enormously effective. Some of the bravest things done for the kingdom are done by people no one is applauding.
Prayer
“Lord, give me the courage of Priscilla β to teach what I know when it is needed, to correct what is incomplete when I see the gap, and to serve faithfully without requiring recognition. Let me be a fellow worker in Your purposes, whatever that costs and wherever it places me. Amen.”
Journal prompt: Priscilla’s courage was in the explaining β truth shared privately, precisely, and without fanfare. What truth do you know that someone in your life needs to hear? What is holding you back β fear of presumption, of being wrong, of not being qualified? What would Priscilla do?
This Is Who You Are
The Brave Enough Declaration
Isaiah 41:10 Β· Joshua 1:9 Β· 2 Timothy 1:7
Today’s Scripture
Isaiah 41:10 Β· Joshua 1:9 Β· 2 Timothy 1:7
“Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, yes, I will help you, I will uphold you with My righteous right hand.” Β· “Have I not commanded you? Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” Β· “For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.”
New King James Version (NKJV)
Reflection
Fourteen days. Six women. One recurring truth: brave is not the absence of fear. Jochebed trembled when she laid the basket in the river. Rahab’s heart raced when she hid the spies. Deborah likely felt the weight of a general who wouldn’t move without her. Esther fasted three days before she could take the walk. Mary Magdalene stood alone at an empty tomb in the dark. Priscilla quietly corrected a man more famous than herself, without announcement and without permission. Every act of courage in this plan was exercised by someone who was afraid β and chose, in that moment, to act anyway.
The commands in today’s passages are not suggestions: “Fear not.” “Be strong and of good courage.” These are imperatives β direct commands from a God who knows His people are afraid and instructs them anyway. Not because the fear isn’t real, but because He is more real. “God has not given us a spirit of fear” β the fear that paralyzes, silences, and keeps us small β “but of power and of love and of a sound mind.” This is your inheritance. Not fearlessness. God never promised that. Power, love, and a sound mind: the equipment for every act of courage He calls you to. You are brave enough. And you are not alone.
Prayer
“Lord, I am brave enough β not because I have conquered my fears, but because You are with me. You strengthen. You help. You uphold. I do not need to manufacture courage. I only need to show up and trust that You will be there. Wherever You send me, You go with me. Whatever You ask of me, You equip me for. I choose, today, to be brave enough. Amen.”
Your Brave Enough Declaration
Write your declaration in your journal. Begin with: “I am brave enough to…” Name one specific act of courage God is calling you to β the conversation, the step, the yes, the no, the staying, the letting go. Name it. Date it. Sign it. Then, below it, write: “The LORD my God is with me wherever I go.”
Final journal prompt: Look back over these 14 days. Which woman’s story resonated most with where you currently are? Write her name and why. Then write your “Brave Enough” declaration: one specific act of courage God is calling you to β named, dated, and committed to. You are not fearless. You are brave enough. And you are not alone.
“For God has not given us a spirit of fear,
but of power and of love and of a sound mind.”
2 Timothy 1:7 Β· NKJV
You are brave enough. And you are not alone.
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