
Iām sitting here this morning, minding my own business, when suddenly my brain decides to host a fullāscale Broadway production starring⦠me. And the supporting cast? Every person Iāve ever interacted with, plus a few who probably donāt even remember my name.
I read something earlier that said “what we think dictates our actions.”
Phew, it hit me right in the āmaāam, you think too muchā part of my soul.
Because listenāI am a deep thinker. Not the cute, poetic kind. More like the āI can create an entire monologue in my head before breakfastā kind. Most of us can say we have great conversations with ourselves, but letās be honest: we also have some intense arguments with people who are not even in the room. You know exactly what I mean. You start prepping for that imaginary confrontation like youāre training for the emotional Olympics.
If she says this, Iāll say that.
If he goes there, Iāve got the perfect oneātwo punch.
(Okay, fineāa really good snarky comment. But in my head, it lands like a knockout.)
And before we know it, our thoughts have already built the walls, dug the moat, and installed the barbed wire fence around a situation we havenāt even lived yet. Sometimes we have talked to the person, but now the whole thing is simmering in our minds like that delicious spicy stew we ate last weekāthe one that tasted amazing but kept us up all night with heartburn. Thatās the kind of thought stew Iām talking about. The kind that burns twice.
We create entire scenarios that may or may not be true.
What if my coworker hates my feedback?
What if my husband doesnāt agree with this decision?
What if theyāre thinking the worst of me?
What if Iām not enough? What if theyāre right? What if Iām wrong?
Thisāright hereāis a take captive moment.
We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ. 2 Corinthians 10:5 (NIV)
Now, I know Paul wasnāt talking about my imaginary arguments or my emotional stew. He was defending himself against the Corinthian rumor mill. But honestly? That makes it even more relevant. Because isnāt that exactly when our thoughts go wildāwhen we think someone is against us, or when weāre afraid they might be right?
And remember, this is the same Paul who told the Corinthians, āImitate me.ā (1 Corinthians 4:16) Not because he was flawless, but because he was practicing what he preachedābringing every thought, every accusation, every insecurity under Christās authority.
So hereās the question that stopped me this morning:
What if the thoughts are true? What if theyāre false? Does any of it change who I am in Christ? Does it change who they are? Does it change how Christ sees either of us?
Spoiler: absolutely not.
But hereās what does change: my attitude.
As Iām having a whole imaginary argument with that coworker, Iām already deciding how Iām going to treat them later. My thoughts are preāwriting my reactions. So when they hop on the morning call and say, āGood morning,ā Iām already braced for battle because I didnāt take those thoughts captive earlier. Iām walking into the day armored up for a war that doesnāt even exist.
And hereās the part that really got me:
When I let those thoughts run wild, Iām not walking in the fullness Christ already gave me. Iām walking in the fullness of my fear, my assumptions, my insecurities, my imaginary courtroom drama. But Colossians 2:10 says I have been brought to fullness in Christ. Not āwill be.ā Not āmight be if I behave.ā Already. Full. Complete. Lacking nothing.
So today, when the thoughts start creeping ināwhen the stew starts simmeringāgrab them. Hold them up to the truth. Make them answer to Christ, not your fear, not your insecurity, and not your imaginary arguments.
Because taking thoughts captive isnāt just about stopping the lies. Itās about replacing them with His fullness. And that takes me right back to what I read this morning: what we think really does dictate our actions.
So letās take those thoughts captive and hand them over to Christāthe One who fills us, the One who defines us, the One who leaves no room for pettiness when weāre full of Him. If Iām walking in His fullness, then I donāt have space for imaginary arguments, emotional barbed wire, or the drama I created before breakfast.
And maybeājust maybeāif we do this before that morning call⦠before the hard conversation with your husband⦠before the coworker pops into your inbox⦠taking those thoughts captive will shift the whole tone of your day. It might make room for something better: a day thatās brighter, steadier, full of Him, and full of joy instead of the stew we simmered up in our heads.
Helping you find peace in the garden againā even if your thoughts need to be taken captive like those weeds youāve been avoiding.
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