Devotions

What motivates you?

“Therefore, encourage one another with these words.” – 1Thessalonians 4:18


Last week we talked about the drive, and today we want to discuss motivation. Though these two are sometimes used interchangeably, they mean different things based on their definitions. The drive is more of an inner urge, whereas motivation is the exterior force that pushes you to achieve your goals. It is also called extrinsic motivation. So, what motivates people? There is mainly one source of motivation: the reward, anything that gives a kind of recognition and compensation that provides a sense of satisfaction of having achieved a goal. It can be material as it can also be emotional, social, and spiritual.  However, motivation can also result from the fear of punishment or being shamed as a failure. There is no better example of motivation than how teachers did in our days. While in elementary schools, our teachers would devise strategies to make us work harder and achieve the best performance we could.  These would include small gifts, a teacher’s note that said well done, etc. They might have looked small but they kept the energy to perform very high. As we would learn later in physics, a moving object will lose its momentum and eventually stop if no other force is applied. That is motivation in my simple definition: the applied force to keep the momentum, to keep us moving forward.


Christian life is a journey; life in general is a walk for believers as for unbelievers. It is very easy to get tired and want to abandon. This is true for everyone; otherwise, Paul would not have seen the need to warn believers of the possibility of losing heart (Galatians 6:9). When such times happen, when you feel like you are losing heart, you need something to strengthen you and give you the courage to carry on. Why does a moving object lose momentum? Because as it moves, it encounters a resistance force that slowly but constantly decreases its speed. Unless there is another force superior to the resistance force that is applied to it, the moving object will completely stop at some point. As we move in our Christian walk, we encounter resistance forces all the way, challenges, disappointments, tests, and tribulations that eat away our strength to carry on. They erode our commitment and determination to reach the place we want to reach, do the things we want to do and serve the way we want to serve. If we do not have other sources of strength, we might even end up abandoning the way.


Paul wrote to the Thessalonians about that. When such times come, encourage one another with “such words”. What words? Words of hope from the living God. As Christians, we must be immersed in the Word and draw our strength from it in our times of trouble and when we feel like fainting. When tired, motivate yourself to keep going because those who trust in the Lord shall renew their strength (Isaiah 40:31). When you fall, says that I will rise again (Micah 7:8). When the devil tells you it’s the end you tell yourself my redeemer lives (Job 19:25) and what he said he will also accomplish. How was David able to strengthen himself in the Lord? He did not wait for someone to tell him the Word. He spoke the Word to himself. He reminded himself what God said about him, that he will be king, that God will never abandon him, that God cannot lie, and many other promises. So, he told his heart to take courage and trust in the Lord who will always be with him. Encourage yourself with the Word and encourage one another with the Word. That is our source of motivation to keep the momentum! Hebrews 10:35 says “do not cast away your confidence, which has great reward.” It is that confidence in the Word that gives us the strength to keep going.


Posted : Feb 16, 2026