Going Steady in a Herky-Jerky World
David Faust reflects on biblical steadfastness and the need for faithful consistency in an unstable world. Drawing from Scripture and everyday examples, he encourages believers, parents, workers, and church leaders to stand firm while continuing to move forward in mission.
- Biblical steadiness means standing firm in faith while still embracing good and necessary change.
- Parents, workers, preachers, and elders all need consistent faithfulness in their daily responsibilities.
- Churches are strengthened when leaders stay faithful, steady, prayerful, and committed over time.
By David Faust
Remember Aesopโs fable about the tortoise and the hare? The fast but overconfident hare learned the moral of the story: โSlow and steady wins the race.โ
Back in the 1960s โgoing steadyโ meant teenage couples agreed to date exclusively. To show their loyalty, they exchanged tokens of affection. A girl would wear her boyfriendโs letterman jacket or his class ring, wrapping yarn around the ring to make it fit her finger.
That kind of going steady went out of fashion a long time ago, but the Bible talks about a different kind of steadiness thatโs important for us today.
On the Move . . . But Immovable
In 1 Corinthians 15:58 the apostle Paul says to be โsteadfastโ and โunmovableโ (King James Version). The New International Version translates it, โStand firm. Let nothing move you.โ
Ironically, we should be โon the moveโ and โimmovableโ at the same time, embracing change when itโs good and resisting change when itโs bad. Good changes keep our faith growing and keep us moving forward to accomplish the churchโs mission. Bad changes prevent us from continuing steadfastly in the apostlesโ teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer (Acts 2:42). Faithโs essentials arenโt negotiable, and we must steadily cling to them.
Steady as You Go
Steadfastness isnโt flashy, but itโs greatly needed. Politicians, business gurus, athletes, and movie stars age and die. Fads and trends come and go. Styles change and cultures shift, but Godโs truth remains constant. We need steadfast, faithful leaders who honor the Lordโs instruction: โContinue in your faith, established and firm, and do not move from the hope held out in the gospelโ (Colossians 1:23, NIV).
At home, parents need to go steady. Moms and dads arenโt perfect, but they need to be present and consistent. Kids need stable relationships, mature guidance, predictable rules, firm discipline, and reassuring love.
At work, bosses and employees need to go steady. Faithfulness isnโt measured by annual performance reviews, but it never goes out of style. Iโve never heard an employee whine, โMy boss is too reliable!โ Nor have I heard a boss complain, โYou know the problem with my employees? They always show up on time, tell the truth, and treat others with respect!โ To borrow a phrase from Good to Great author Jim Collins, organizations thrive in high-trust environments where teammates steadily โpush the flywheelโ in the same direction day after day.
At church, preachers and elders need to go steady. Love the people and walk with them through their ups and downs. Teach Godโs Word week after week, day after day. Celebrate wins together. Endure hard times together. Seek Godโs wisdom in prayer. Keep a positive attitude and a sense of humor. Take risks that stretch your faith. (Steadiness doesnโt mean โboringโ or โafraid to try new thingsโ).
And steadiness means sticking around. Too much leadership turnover weakens the church. So do herky-jerky leaders who subscribe to the โvision of the month clubโ and the congregation never knows whatโs coming next. Timothy may have been tempted to high-tail it out of a tough city like Ephesus, but Paul told him to โstay thereโ and stick it out (1 Timothy 1:3). Of course, preachers shouldnโt stay too long if their effectiveness has eroded; but many bale out too soon, missing fruitful years and lasting results. Someone said we overestimate what can be accomplished in a year and underestimate what can be accomplished in 10 years.
In todayโs herky-jerky world, donโt add to the instability. Build your house on the Rock. Buckle down, be faithful, and stay steady.





