You Die, I Die

We are just coming off the back of Stranger Things season 5, and whether you are waiting for the “real ending” to come out or trying to cope with the fact that it is just over, I want to address a scene in this finale. (Warning ahead, there are mild spoilers and content from Season 5, so fair warning if you are trying to avoid that.)

“You die, I die”

The relationship between Steve Harringinton and Dustin Henderson in Stranger Things has always been one of my favorite things in the show. We see Steve stepping up in season 2 to take care of and protect Dustin and his friends, to becoming Dustin’s best friend as the seasons progress.

In Stranger Things Season 3, there’s a moment that feels small but sticks with you. Steve opens up what they think may be a bomb and tell everyone to back up. However Dustin, wide-eyed and loyal to the core, looks at Steve and says, “You die, I die.” It’s half dramatic, half humorous—but heartfelt. Dustin isn’t posturing. He’s declaring allegiance. Wherever you go, I go. Whatever happens to you, happens to me.

Then in Season 5, years later and after everything they’ve been through, while they are reconciling and preparing to go into the final fight, Steve recalls that moment and says it back to Dustin.

“You die, I die.”

Same words. Deeper meaning. Tested loyalty.

It’s no longer a joke. It’s a covenant. They have lived life together, seen horrible things, laughed, lost, and cried together. They have fought and argued with each other. This is friendship.

And every time I hear it, I can’t help but think about Jesus and our call to die to ourselves for Him as He has died for us.

(This clip has spoilers from season 5 of Stranger Things, and some language that may be slightly offensive. The video is to capture the moments of their relationship, but not necessary need to watch it for the rest of this blog.)

The Call to Die

Jesus never hid the cost of following Him. He didn’t sell a comfortable life, a safer path, or a faith that fits neatly into our schedules. Instead, He said something jarring:

“Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.”
— Luke 9:23

That’s not metaphorical fluff. In Jesus’ time, everyone knew what a cross meant. It meant death. Shame. The end of your old life.

To follow Jesus is to say, in a very real way, “You die, I die.”

Where You lead, I follow.
If You suffer, I suffer.
If You die to Yourself, I die to myself too.

Dying to Ourselves Isn’t Popular—But It’s Necessary

Our culture is obsessed with self-preservation:

  • Protect your brand
  • Guard your comfort
  • Curate your image
  • Do what makes you happy

But discipleship runs in the opposite direction.

Dying to ourselves means:

  • Letting go of pride
  • Releasing control
  • Saying no to sin even when it feels justified
  • Choosing obedience when it costs us something

Paul understood this deeply when he wrote:

“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me.”
— Galatians 2:20

That’s not poetic language—it’s identity. The old Paul died. A new life began.

Discipleship Is Shared Death—and Shared Life

One of the most beautiful parts of that Stranger Things moment isn’t just the words—it’s who says them. Dustin and Steve don’t survive alone. They grow together. They fail together. They keep showing up for each other.

That’s discipleship.

Following Jesus was never meant to be a solo journey. We are called to walk with others who are also learning how to die to themselves and live for Christ. People who can look at each other in moments of fear, temptation, or suffering and say, “I’m still with you.”

Not because it’s easy—but because it’s worth it.

Jesus Said It First

Before Dustin ever said it to Steve, before Steve ever said it back, Jesus lived it out for us.

Jesus didn’t say, “You die, I die.”
He said, “I’ll die so you can live.”

He took up His cross. He laid down His life. And then He invited us into that same pattern of death and resurrection.

Dying to ourselves isn’t the end of the story—it’s the beginning of real life.

“For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.”
— Luke 9:24

So What Does That Mean for Us?

It means following Jesus will cost us something.
It means discipleship is more than belief—it’s surrender.
It means we don’t just admire Jesus; we imitate Him.

Every day, in small unseen ways, we choose:

  • The cross over comfort
  • Obedience over applause
  • Faithfulness over fear

And when we do, we echo the truest words of loyalty a disciple can say:

Jesus, You die… I die.

And somehow, in God’s upside-down kingdom, that’s where life truly begins.


Father God,

You did not call us to comfort, but to the cross.
You did not promise ease, but You promised life.

Today, we come before You acknowledging that we often cling to ourselves—
our pride, our plans, our need for control.
We confess that dying to ourselves is hard, and sometimes we resist it.

But You went first.

You carried the cross we deserved.
You laid down Your life so we could truly live.

So today we say it again, not lightly and not casually:
Where You go, we will go.
If You call us to die to ourselves, we will trust You with the outcome.

Teach us what it means to deny ourselves daily.
Help us lay down sin, fear, comfort, and distraction.
Form us into true disciples—not just hearers of Your Word,
but followers who live it out.

Surround us with people who walk this road with us,
who remind us of truth when we are weak,
and who point us back to You when we forget why we started.

Jesus, we want our lives to echo Yours.
Not our will, but Yours be done.
Not our lives, but Yours lived through us.

We trust You with our death—
and we trust You with the life that comes after.

In your son’s name, Jesus, we pray,
Amen.

Becoming a Person of Influence

Influence is a powerful thing—often more powerful than we realize.

As a leader, I have the ability to point at something and people will look. I had used influence—without force, without commands—simply by existing in a position of leadership.

Influence doesn’t require control, authority, or even intention. It just happens.

So the real question isn’t whether we have influence.
The question is: what kind of influence are we becoming?


What Is Influence?

John Maxwell famously said, “Leadership is influence.”
Theologian W. M. Taylor described it this way: “Influence is the exhalation of character.”

In other words, influence flows naturally out of who we are.

Everyone has character. Some people are honest; others are deceitful. Some are dependable; others are unreliable. Some work hard; others cut corners. And whether we like it or not, our character is shaping the people around us—for good or for harm.

Scripture warns us plainly:

“Bad company corrupts good character.” — 1 Corinthians 15:33

But the opposite is also true. Good character influences good character. We rub off on one another.

And let’s be honest—the world right now is desperate for people of godly character. If followers of Jesus aren’t influencing culture with the ways of Christ, the culture will gladly fill that void itself.

Complaining won’t change the world. Elections won’t fix it. Court rulings won’t redeem hearts. Legislation can’t produce holiness.

Real change happens when followers of Jesus influence people toward Jesus—one life at a time.


“I’m Not Influential”… Or Are You?

A common response is, “I’m not a leader. I don’t have influence.”

That simply isn’t true.

Everyone leaves a legacy. You influence children, nieces and nephews, coworkers, teammates, neighbors, friends—sometimes without even knowing it. Someone is watching how you live.

Influence doesn’t mean manipulation or control. God doesn’t force us into obedience. He sets the example in Jesus and invites us into life with Him. Kingdom influence is about inspiration, modeling, and faithfulness—not coercion.

Parents understand this instinctively. You can control your kids when you’re in the room, but what happens when you aren’t there? If influence hasn’t taken root, control disappears.

The same is true for employers, teachers, coaches, and leaders of every kind. Control might create compliance for a moment—but only influence shapes hearts when no one is watching.


Salt, Light, and Responsibility

Jesus made our calling unmistakably clear:

“You are the salt of the earth… You are the light of the world.”
Matthew 5:13–16

Salt preserves. Light reveals. Both influence their environment simply by being present.

If we claim to follow Jesus but fail to influence the world toward Him, we’ve missed our calling.


Paul: A Man of Influence

In Galatians 1, we see the apostle Paul as a powerful example of godly influence:

“They only heard the report: ‘The man who formerly persecuted us is now preaching the faith he once tried to destroy.’ And they praised God because of me.”
Galatians 1:23–24

That last line matters: “They praised God because of me.”

Paul’s life pointed so clearly to Jesus that God received the glory.

How did Paul become that kind of person? Galatians 1 gives us three guiding principles.


1. Be a God-Pleaser, Not a People-Pleaser

Paul writes:

“If I were still trying to please people, I would not be a servant of Christ.”
Galatians 1:10

This is harder than it sounds.

We all want to be liked. We want approval from spouses, bosses, friends, church people—even strangers. But God is the only one who clearly tells us what He wants and gives us the power to live it out.

You can’t serve two masters (Matthew 6:24). Eventually, one voice will win.

Here’s the reality: who you aim to please will determine the depth and kind of influence you have.

If you live to please people, your influence will always be limited.
If you live to please God, your influence becomes God-sized.


2. Let God Set the Mission for Your Life

Paul makes it clear that his mission didn’t come from people—it came from Jesus:

“I received it by revelation from Jesus Christ.”
Galatians 1:12

Your life mission isn’t something you invent. It isn’t assigned by parents, pastors, spouses, or culture. Only God sets that mission.

That doesn’t mean others can’t help confirm it. In fact, God often uses mature believers to affirm what He’s already doing.

There are also two important tests:

  1. God’s mission will never contradict Scripture.
  2. God’s mission will be affirmed by godly leaders over time.

Paul knew exactly why he existed:

“God… was pleased to reveal his Son in me so that I might preach him among the Gentiles.”
Galatians 1:15–16

Distractions are everywhere. Hobbies, careers, ambitions—even good things—can quietly replace God’s mission if we aren’t careful.

God’s mission must remain first.


3. Stick With It for the Long Haul

Influence takes time.

Paul didn’t receive full recognition overnight. It took fourteen years of faithful ministry before the church fully affirmed his calling.

Credibility is built slowly. Trust is earned through consistency. There are no shortcuts.

I’ve learned this personally. My own calling unfolded through failure, waiting, training, humility, and time. I wasn’t ready when I wanted the microphone—but God was faithful to shape me before placing me.

If you approach God’s mission casually, the result will be shallow.
If you commit for the long haul, God will produce something enduring.


So What Kind of Influence Are You Becoming?

Like it or not, you are a role model to someone.

The real question is whether people will one day be able to say what they said about Paul:

“They praised God because of me.”

If that’s the influence you want to have:

  • Be a God-pleaser, not a people-pleaser
  • Let God define your mission
  • Commit to it for the long haul

That’s how ordinary people become people of eternal influence.

And if any of this stirred something in you—questions about faith, purpose, or next steps—don’t ignore it. God may be inviting you into something deeper.

Sometimes influence begins simply by saying yes.

Listen to the sermon “Being a Person of Influence” I preached at CenterPoint Church 6/8/2025

Revving Up the Faith: A Monster Jam Experience

My family and I recently had the opportunity to attend Monster Jam in St. Louis on January 22nd. It was a Christmas gift from my mom, and it was a blast! I enjoyed watching Monster Jam when I was younger, but now I get to enjoy that our family has slowly become fans of the sport, and it was an incredible experience to watch the trucks perform live with my kids. My kids have gotten into it enough already, that all adopted their favorite teams. Savannah is into Grave Digger, Oliver loves the giant shark Megalodon, and Ivy gets a kick out of El Loco Toro as it blows smoke from its nostrils. It was cool to get to see all three running in the event.

Continue reading “Revving Up the Faith: A Monster Jam Experience”

COVID-19, Technology, and Fear

This has been a hard season for everyone. With the COVID-19 quarantine and the mandated stay at home orders that most people are facing, care and communication are very important right now. How do we do that without being able to get out? Well, we need to rely on technology to help us during these times. But just like COVID-19  so many people are afraid or have a hatred for technology.

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