

2 Timothy 2:3
''Endure hardship as a good soldier of Christ
Jesus”
Welcome to Part 13 of our series: Taking the Civilian Out of You. We’ve run through the heat, crawled through the dirt, pushed through the pain, and now we arrive at the final lap—not just of the training, but of the transformation.
This is where the breaking ends—and the building begins. But not everyone made it here.
The transformation reached its peak when the commanders finally began to allow the trainees to sleep again. For months, they had been denied sleep, food, and comfort. They were mentally and physically stripped of every civilian trait until nothing familiar remained.
One friend, Conrad, shared how he nearly quit. The severity of the training left him dizzy, weak, and at one point, on the verge of collapsing at the assembly square. But then a voice reminded him: “You survived day two—you’re not dying today.” That resolve kept him going. For himself. For his family. For everyone who believed in him.
They weren’t just building strength—they were building responsibility.
When road runs came, the only thing that pulled him through was companionship. His fellow trainee was also tired, almost giving up. But Conrad insisted, “Let’s sing the military JAMA song till we get to the end.” And they did. That chant became their breath, their beat, and their breakthrough.
We overcome when we run together.
But here’s the sobering truth—not everyone finished.
Some who entered the training field died—not because they were weak, but because they lied. They falsified medical records to get in, hiding health issues that would later betray them. They collapsed under the weight of a process their bodies were never prepared for.
And the lesson?
You can fake certificates, but you can’t fake strength in the fire.
The process will expose you.
The transformation will test your truth.
And only those who are genuinely ready will survive.
Don’t lie about where you are.
Don’t fake readiness.
Don’t rush what God wants to prepare.
This isn’t just about military training—this is about life, destiny, and calling.
REFLECTION
As we conclude, ask yourself:
Have I submitted to God's breaking, or am I still clinging to civilian comforts?
Have I been honest about where I am spiritually, emotionally, physically, and financially?
Who am I running this race with, and am I helping them finish strong?
This final lap is your wake-up call. Go back to the earlier laps if you must. Revisit the squats, the crawls, the pressure points. Let God finish the work in you. Then rise—not just as a survivor, but as a soldier.
PRAYER
Father, I surrender to Your full transformation.
Strip away the false, the fake, and the fragile.
Build me into one You can trust.
Help me to stand, to run, and to finish—
For Your glory, not just my gain. Amen.
Next Chapter
This may be the final lap of this series—but it is the beginning of a new discipline, a new devotion, a new destiny.
Get ready. Deployment is next.
📌 Let’s Talk:
What has this series Taking the Civilian Out of You meant to you? Which part spoke to you the most, and how has it impacted your journey? Share your thoughts, testimonies, or questions—we grow better together.
Thank you!
Prince Julius Nenebi-Darkson
(EL-PJ God's Penman)
What I could pick from this insightful write-up is that, success demands honesty; with others and with ourselves.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Esi! You've captured everything perfectly. God bless you richly 🙏
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