Building Confidence Through Faith
Confidence is often portrayed as a personality trait—something people either have or don’t.
But a growing body of faith-based performance teaching suggests otherwise.
Confidence, in this context, is not a feeling. It’s a byproduct of action.
📖 Joshua 1:9 doesn’t instruct believers to wait for confidence – it commands courage. The distinction is important. Courage comes first. Confidence follows.
This principle is central to programs like Confidence Through Christ (Not Ego), which challenges the traditional understanding of self-confidence.
Instead of focusing on self-belief alone, it emphasizes:
Identity rooted in Christ
Action taken despite fear
Repetition as the foundation of confidence
Shift your mindset from:
“I need to feel ready before I act”
to
“I become ready by acting.”
This approach not only reduces hesitation but also removes the pressure of perfection. Confidence becomes less about image and more about alignment.
The result is a quieter, more grounded form of confidence, one that isn’t driven by ego, but by trust.
Not in oneself alone, but in God working through them.

