Defeating Life's Giants

Pastor Bart Leger •
May 26, 2026

5 Minute Read

There's a kind of problem that doesn't go away when you ignore it. Maybe it's a fear that keeps coming back. Maybe it's a sin you've fallen into more times than you can count. Whatever it is, you've tried to handle it on your own, and it hasn't worked.

Most of us have something like this. The Bible has a name for it. It calls these problems giants.


Man sitting in despair

The story of David and Goliath shows us how to face them.

The story

Israel's army had been camped across a valley from the Philistine army for forty days. Every morning, a giant named Goliath came out and shouted insults at the Israelite soldiers. Every morning, no one stepped up to fight him. The whole army was paralyzed by fear.

David was a teenager. He wasn't a soldier. He had come to the camp to bring food to his older brothers. When he heard Goliath, he didn't see what everyone else saw. He saw a man defying the God of Israel. He volunteered to fight.

When King Saul tried to put armor on him, David refused. He couldn't move in it. He went out to meet Goliath with five smooth stones and a sling. Before he threw the first stone, he said this:

"You come to me with sword, spear, and javelin, but I come to you in the name of the Lord of Heaven's Armies—the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. Today the Lord will conquer you. And then everyone assembled here will know that the Lord rescues his people, but not with sword and spear. This is the Lord's battle, and he will give you to us." (1 Samuel 17:45–47, NLT)

Then he killed Goliath with one stone.

The story is famous. What it teaches about facing our own giants is less famous. There are four moves David made that we can learn from.

Bring the giant into the light

The first move is admitting the giant exists.

Most of us don't want to do this. We'd rather pretend the fear isn't there, or tell ourselves we'll deal with it later. We push it back into the shadows where we don't have to look at it.

David did the opposite. He looked at Goliath and named the problem out loud. Then he volunteered to fight.

You have to do the same with whatever you're facing. Name it. Tell someone trustworthy. A giant in the dark only grows.

Don't try to fight it alone

The second move asks more of you. You have to stop trying to handle it yourself.

Saul tried to put his own armor on David. David turned it down. He knew he wasn't going to win this fight by being a better soldier. The fight wasn't his to win on his own.

When you're facing a giant, your instinct is to grind through it on your own. You think if you just gave it more effort, you could beat it. You can't. That's not how giants get defeated.

This is where prayer becomes a starting point, not a last resort. You bring the giant to God before you try anything else. You ask Him for what you can't get yourself.

Trust God to fight for you

The third move asks even more. You have to believe God will help.

David told Goliath that the battle belonged to the Lord. He wasn't being humble for show. He believed it. Goliath was bigger and more experienced. None of that mattered, because David wasn't fighting alone.

Most of us claim to trust God when nothing's at stake. The trust gets tested when the stakes are high. When the diagnosis comes back, or when the sin won't let go, that's the moment when "I trust God" stops being a theological idea and becomes the thing you're doing.

You can't trust God in the abstract. You trust Him with the specific giant standing in front of you.

See your giant through God's eyes

The fourth move changes how you see everything.

Israel saw a giant they couldn't beat. David saw a man defying God. Same Goliath, two different views.

Whatever you're facing today seems bigger than you because, on your own, it is. But that's not the right comparison. The right comparison is your giant against God. And God is bigger.

Seeing the giant through God's eyes changes how you face it. The problem may be just as big as you think. God is bigger.

One last thing

These four moves don't make the giant disappear. David still had to walk down into that valley. He still had to face Goliath.

But he wasn't fighting alone, and he knew it.

You're not fighting alone either. Bring the giant out of the shadows and stop trying to handle it by yourself. Trust God with what you're facing, and let Him show you how big it is in light of Him.

Then take the next step. The Lord rescues His people. He hasn't stopped.

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May 26, 2026 • 5 Minute Read
Defeating Life's Giants
There's a kind of problem that doesn't go away when you ignore it. Maybe it's a fear that keeps coming back. Maybe it's a sin you've fallen into more times than you can count. Whatever it is, you've tried to handle it on your own, and it hasn't worked. Most of us have something like this. The Bible has a name for it. It calls these problems giants. The story of David and Goliath shows us how to face them. The story Israel's army had been camped across a valley from the Philistine army for forty days. Every morning, a giant named Goliath came out and shouted insults at the Israelite soldiers. Every morning, no one stepped up to fight him. The whole army was paralyzed by fear. David was a teenager. He wasn't a soldier. He had come to the camp to bring food to his older brothers. When he heard Goliath, he didn't see what everyone else saw. He saw a man defying the God of Israel. He volunteered to fight. When King Saul tried to put armor on him, David refused. He couldn't move in it. He went out to meet Goliath with five smooth stones and a sling. Before he threw the first stone, he said this: "You come to me with sword, spear, and javelin, but I come to you in the name of the Lord of Heaven's Armies—the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. Today the Lord will conquer you. And then everyone assembled here will know that the Lord rescues his people, but not with sword and spear. This is the Lord's battle, and he will give you to us." (1 Samuel 17:45–47, NLT) Then he killed Goliath with one stone. The story is famous. What it teaches about facing our own giants is less famous. There are four moves David made that we can learn from. Bring the giant into the light The first move is admitting the giant exists. Most of us don't want to do this. We'd rather pretend the fear isn't there, or tell ourselves we'll deal with it later. We push it back into the shadows where we don't have to look at it. David did the opposite. He looked at Goliath and named the problem out loud. Then he volunteered to fight. You have to do the same with whatever you're facing. Name it. Tell someone trustworthy. A giant in the dark only grows. Don't try to fight it alone The second move asks more of you. You have to stop trying to handle it yourself. Saul tried to put his own armor on David. David turned it down. He knew he wasn't going to win this fight by being a better soldier. The fight wasn't his to win on his own. When you're facing a giant, your instinct is to grind through it on your own. You think if you just gave it more effort, you could beat it. You can't. That's not how giants get defeated. This is where prayer becomes a starting point, not a last resort. You bring the giant to God before you try anything else. You ask Him for what you can't get yourself. Trust God to fight for you The third move asks even more. You have to believe God will help. David told Goliath that the battle belonged to the Lord. He wasn't being humble for show. He believed it. Goliath was bigger and more experienced. None of that mattered, because David wasn't fighting alone. Most of us claim to trust God when nothing's at stake. The trust gets tested when the stakes are high. When the diagnosis comes back, or when the sin won't let go, that's the moment when "I trust God" stops being a theological idea and becomes the thing you're doing. You can't trust God in the abstract. You trust Him with the specific giant standing in front of you. See your giant through God's eyes The fourth move changes how you see everything. Israel saw a giant they couldn't beat. David saw a man defying God. Same Goliath, two different views. Whatever you're facing today seems bigger than you because, on your own, it is. But that's not the right comparison. The right comparison is your giant against God. And God is bigger. Seeing the giant through God's eyes changes how you face it. The problem may be just as big as you think. God is bigger. One last thing These four moves don't make the giant disappear. David still had to walk down into that valley. He still had to face Goliath. But he wasn't fighting alone, and he knew it. You're not fighting alone either. Bring the giant out of the shadows and stop trying to handle it by yourself. Trust God with what you're facing, and let Him show you how big it is in light of Him. Then take the next step. The Lord rescues His people. He hasn't stopped.
May 26, 2026 • 4 Minute Read
Why Belonging to a Church Matters
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May 26, 2026 • 5 Minute Read
10 Ways to Build a Christ Centered Home
You don't get an evening alone to think through your kids' spiritual life. You get the half-second between dinner cleanup and the homework battle. You get the moment before bed when you're already tired. This is where faith gets passed down. Not in a class or a program. In the small moments of a normal week. The Bible tells us that what we do in our homes matters. The choices you make about what you talk about and what you make time for shape your kids' picture of who God is. Here are ten ways to build a Christ-centered home. Some of them will fit your family right now. Others will not. Take what helps and leave the rest. Make time for family devotions Set aside regular time to read the Bible together. It doesn't have to be long. Ten minutes after breakfast or before bed is enough to start. What matters is consistency. Find a routine that fits your family's rhythm. Some families do this in the morning. Others do it in the evening. Pick what you can stick with for more than two weeks. Pray together Prayer is how kids learn that God is listening. They watch you pray, and they learn what prayer is. You don't need polished words. You need to be open in front of your kids about what you're asking God for. Pray over meals and before bed. Let your kids hear you bring whatever you're carrying to God. Create a home that points to Him Your house tells your kids what matters to you. The things on the walls and the conversations at dinner add up over time. All of it teaches them what your family is about. You don't have to fill the house with religious decorations. But you can put a Bible on the coffee table where it gets used. You can put up something with a verse that matters to you. You can let the house, in small ways, say that this family follows Jesus. Talk about faith openly Most kids don't ask the big questions in the church parking lot. They ask them in the car or at bedtime, when their guard is down. Be ready to talk, and be okay not having all the answers. Tell them what you believe, and tell them when you don't know. Your faith should be something you're working out too, not a finished package you handed down. If they bring up something that throws you, don't shut it down. The questions that make you uncomfortable are usually the most important ones. Serve together Faith that doesn't move out into the world goes stale. Find a way for your family to serve someone outside your house. Maybe the food pantry, or a neighbor who could use help with the yard. Bring your kids with you. Let them see what it looks like to give time and effort to someone who can't repay you. That's where they learn what Jesus meant by loving your neighbor. Share your faith with others Your kids learn how to talk about Jesus by hearing you do it. If you only talk about your faith at home, they'll learn that faith is private. If you talk about it with the people in your life, they'll learn that faith is something you bring with you. Invite people to church and let your kids hear you tell stories about what God is doing in your life. They learn from what you do out loud. Make church a priority Show up to church regularly and bring your kids. Let them be part of the community of believers around you. Church gives kids something a Christian home alone cannot give. Other adults who care about them, and a bigger picture than just their own family. When church gets inconvenient, go anyway. Your kids are watching what you protect time for. Encourage their own time with God As your kids get older, they need their own faith, not just yours. Give them age-appropriate Bibles. Let them see you doing your own devotions and hear you talk about what you're learning. If they ask questions about what they're reading, take it seriously. Their faith is becoming theirs, and they need you to treat it that way. Keep Christ at the center of holidays Christmas and Easter come with a lot of pressure to do them right. Presents, traditions, and family expectations. The actual reasons for these days can get buried. Be intentional about pointing back to Jesus during these seasons. Read the nativity story together at Christmas. When Easter comes, talk about why we have Easter at all. The holidays will fill up with everything else if you let them. Live what you teach This one matters more than the other nine combined. If you tell your kids that following Jesus matters, but they don't see it in how you treat their mother and how you handle stress, they'll know. They watch what you do, not what you say. You don't have to be perfect. You have to keep trying. Show them what it looks like to follow Jesus when you mess up. Apologize when you should, and try again the next day. That's the most powerful thing you can teach them about grace. One last thing Building a Christ-centered home is a thousand small choices made over the years. You'll get some of them right. You'll get some of them wrong. Keep showing up. The kids you're raising are watching the God you say you serve. Let them see Him in you.
May 26, 2026 • 6 Minute Read
Move From Stress to Gratitude by Meditating on the Psalms
There's a kind of tiredness that comes from being scared for too long. It's the exhaustion that sleep doesn't fix. Watching the news makes it worse. The Psalms have been carrying people through this kind of stretch for thousands of years. They give us a pattern we can use when we don't know what to pray. The pattern is simple. We cry out to God about what's happening, and we hold onto hope because help is coming. Two moves. The first one tells the truth. The second one takes faith. Three kinds of seasons Walter Brueggemann, an Old Testament scholar, noticed something while he was studying the Psalms. He saw three different kinds of life moments showing up in them. He called them seasons of orientation, disorientation, and new orientation (Brueggemann, 1984). When life is in orientation, things are working. The bills are getting paid, and you can feel God's blessings. This is where we hope to spend most of our days. Then something breaks. Maybe a diagnosis comes back bad, or the job ends. We move into disorientation, where the ground we trusted is gone. This is what most of the Psalms are written from. After a long stretch of disorientation, we sometimes find our way to a different kind of solid ground. The crisis isn't always over. But we've learned something we couldn't have learned any other way. Brueggemann called this new orientation. It's a place of gratitude that has been through something. The Psalms walk us through all three. That's why they matter so much when life turns difficult. What the psalmist does When you read a psalm of lament, you'll see the writer doing something that might surprise you. They complain to God. Out loud. With specifics. They tell God what's wrong and why they feel forgotten. They don't dress it up. They don't pretend to have faith they don't have. They give God the situation as it stands. Then, somewhere in the middle of the psalm, something shifts. The writer remembers what God has done before. The remembering does something to the complaint. While it doesn't erase the pain. It puts the pain in perspective. By the end of the psalm, the writer is praising God. The problem hasn't gone away. He's praising because he's standing on what he remembered. This is the bridge from complaint to praise. We tell God what's wrong, and we let memory feed our hope. Psalm 13 Look at how this works in Psalm 13: "O LORD, how long will you forget me? Forever? How long will you look the other way? How long must I struggle with anguish in my soul, with sorrow in my heart every day? How long will my enemy have the upper hand? Turn and answer me, O LORD my God! Restore the sparkle to my eyes, or I will die. Don't let my enemies gloat, saying, 'We have defeated him!' Don't let them rejoice at my downfall. But I trust in your unfailing love. I will rejoice because you have rescued me. I will sing to the LORD because he is good to me." (NLT) The complaint is right there. He's been waiting. He's tired. Then comes the turn. "But I trust in your unfailing love." That's it. Seven words. The whole psalm pivots on that "but." The writer hasn't been rescued. The enemy is still there. He remembers what's true about God anyway, and that memory brings praise out of him. How to pray this way You don't have to wait for a perfect moment to pray like the psalmist. You can do it on the drive home from a tough meeting, or after the kids have gone to bed. Find a Psalm of lament. Psalm 13 is a good place to start. Read it slowly enough to let it tell you what kind of words you're allowed to say to God. Then make it personal. Find one verse that fits your complaint and make it your own. If the psalmist says, "How long must I struggle with anguish in my soul?" and that's exactly what you're feeling, say it. Pray it back to God. He already knows. Stay there as long as you need to. Some days, the lament is the prayer. Some examples might help. Say you're worried about a child who's pulled away from the family. You can take Psalm 13's "How long must I struggle with anguish in my soul" and pray it about your child. Make it specific. Tell God how long you've been waiting for them to come back, and what you've watched them go through. The psalmist's words take shape as your prayer for your specific situation. When you're ready, find a verse from later in the psalm that turns toward God. "But I trust in your unfailing love." Pray that one too. Mean it as much as you can. The same principle applies when you turn toward trust. "But I trust in your unfailing love" is the prayer of someone who knows that God has loved this child longer than they have. The situation may stay the same. What changes is who you're trusting in the middle of it. You may have to come back to this prayer all day. The fear comes back. The tough conversation comes back. Each time, you can do it again. Lament. Then trust. A word from Paul Paul wrote something to the Thessalonian church that fits here. He said: "Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus." (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18, NLT) Notice the wording. Paul says to give thanks "in all circumstances," not "for all circumstances." There's a difference. You don't have to thank God that your friend is sick. You can thank Him in the middle of your friend's sickness for being there with you. The Psalms taught Paul this. They can teach us too. One more thing If you're feeling disoriented right now, I want you to hear something clearly. God is here. He hears you. The psalmist's confidence didn't depend on his circumstances. It rested on the character of the God he was praying to. That God hasn't changed. Tell Him what's happening. Tell him how scared you are. Then, when you can, remember. He has been faithful to His people for a long time. He'll be faithful to you.