🌑 The Physics of Faith
- Reverend Gin Bishop

- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
There’s a moment in every creation story where something small meets something sacred — where friction becomes fire.
In the language of physics, ignition requires three things: fuel, oxygen, and heat.
In the language of faith, it’s message, visibility, and belief.
But so many of us try to light a bonfire with matchsticks alone.
We have the message — our purpose, our vision, our calling — but no kindling, no breath.
We strike the match again and again, watching it burn out between our fingers, wondering why the flame won’t catch.
It’s not because your message isn’t powerful enough.
It’s because it’s suffocating.
Every calling needs oxygen — visibility, connection, exchange.
Faith isn’t hiding the flame under a basket and hoping God will fan it.
Faith is breathing life into it yourself.
This is the physics of faith:
Belief is not static. It’s kinetic.
It moves when you move.
It expands when you exhale, when you risk being seen, when you let the wind of uncertainty meet the spark of intention.
So yes, time may feel short.
The match may feel small.
But remember this — every inferno begins with one spark that refused to die in the wind.

You’re not out of time.
You’re in ignition.
The bonfire you’re building — your mission, your message, your ministry — doesn’t need perfect conditions. It needs breath.
It needs you to stop holding your breath and believe out loud.
Because panic smothers, but presence fuels.
Fear tightens, but faith expands.
Faith doesn’t ignore the darkness — it just keeps lighting matches anyway.
And when those tiny flames finally meet the kindling of connection, the world sees what God saw all along: a fire big enough to warm the coldest night.
So breathe.
Exhale your belief into the field.
Post the thing. Record the message. Ask for the help. Speak the truth.
Give your flame the oxygen it’s been waiting for.
Because visibility isn’t vanity — it’s voltage.
And every soul brave enough to be seen becomes part of the divine circuitry that keeps this universe lit.




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