This really gets at the heart of Epistle to the Philippians 2. The “mind of Christ” isn’t something we achieve by effort, but something God forms in us as the old self is put to death and Jesus’s life takes shape.
In a VUCA world, that doesn’t make us more in control—it makes us more present: willing to serve, forgive, and remain with others in the mess. And the good news is we’re not bringing Jesus into those spaces—he’s already there. We’re being drawn into what he’s already doing.
This really gets at the heart of Epistle to the Philippians 2. The “mind of Christ” isn’t something we achieve by effort, but something God forms in us as the old self is put to death and Jesus’s life takes shape.
In a VUCA world, that doesn’t make us more in control—it makes us more present: willing to serve, forgive, and remain with others in the mess. And the good news is we’re not bringing Jesus into those spaces—he’s already there. We’re being drawn into what he’s already doing.