Good morning, brothers. Before you jump into the weekend, before the errands, the projects, the family activities, or whatever else is competing for your attention today, I want you to take a few minutes and do something most men spend their lives avoiding. I want you to tell yourself the truth. Not the version of the week you planned. Not the version you hoped for on Monday. Not the version you wish happened. The truth about the week you actually lived. One of the biggest mistakes we make as men is confusing intention with action. We tell ourselves we meant to pray more. We meant to spend time in Scripture. We meant to get our workout done. We meant to be more patient, more disciplined, more present, more obedient. But at the end of the day, intention doesn't produce transformation. Action does. James tells us not to merely listen to the Word but to do what it says. That's because information alone never changes a man. Most of us already know what we should be doing. The issue isn't a lack of knowledge. The issue is whether we're willing to obey what we already know. That's why I love Saturday mornings. Saturday gives us an opportunity to pause and look in the mirror. Not to beat ourselves up. Not to walk around carrying guilt. Not to focus on failure. But to take an honest inventory of where we are. - Did you keep your word this week? - Did you follow through on the commitments you made? - Did you choose discipline when comfort was calling your name? - Did you spend time with God when nobody was watching? - Did you do the things you said were important, or did you continue negotiating with the man you know God is calling you to become? Those questions can be uncomfortable, but discomfort isn't always a bad thing. Sometimes discomfort is evidence that God is revealing something that needs attention. Sometimes conviction is simply an invitation to grow. The truth is, God isn't looking for perfect men. If perfection was the requirement, none of us would qualify. What He's looking for are surrendered men. Men who are willing to be honest about where they are. Men who take ownership instead of making excuses. Men who get back up after they stumble. Men who keep showing up and doing the work even when they don't feel like it.