The state of a person’s mission is a reflection of the state of their relationship with God. Mission does not originate from ambition, talent, or opportunity; it flows from a divine source. Purpose, calling, and destiny are received, not invented. Because the assignment comes from God, sustaining it requires ongoing fellowship with Him. Strength for the journey is not merely physical or material. It is spiritual and mental. A person must continually draw from God to remain aligned, focused, and resilient. When fellowship weakens, clarity fades, endurance drops, and the mission begins to suffer.
No matter how disciplined or skilled a person is, much of what determines success lies outside human control. Results depend on timing, favor, open doors, and unseen coordination. One can do excellent work, prepare thoroughly, and still need God to move circumstances into place. This is why trust matters more than resources. Faith bridges the gap between effort and outcome. That faith is not abstract; it is built through prayer, obedience, and consistent communion with God. When fellowship is strong, confidence remains steady even when outcomes are delayed or uncertain.
Scripture repeatedly warns against disconnecting mission from relationship. Paul spoke of grace supplied but cautioned against frustrating that grace. In Galatians, he rebuked believers for starting in the Spirit and attempting to finish in the flesh. Many people begin well, full of clarity and fire, but lose momentum over time. The issue is rarely the mission itself; it is neglect of fellowship after direction is received. Purpose must be sustained the same way it was revealed, by staying with God, step by step, until the work is complete. There is no other way.
