

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Christy Narsi

“But He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That’s why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9–10
If you’ve ever heard this verse used to tell you to embrace suffering for suffering’s sake, you’re not alone. Many people interpret Paul’s words to mean we should enjoy pain, hardship, and persecution—as though being crushed is somehow the goal.
But that’s not what Paul was saying at all.
He wasn’t delighting in the pain. He delighted that grace met him in every position. His position looked like weakness to the world but from God’s perspective, Paul’s position hadn’t changed anything.
When Paul was strong in the Lord, he was strong in the Lord. When Paul was weak in circumstances, he was still strong in the Lord.
Paul needed God to remind him that nothing had changed.
In Aramaic, the word Paul used for delight is tseva—a word that originally carried a dual meaning. Yes, it meant to take pleasure in, but it also meant a battle cry—a declaration to fight to the finish for the pleasure of your King*.
When Paul said he “took pleasure” in weaknesses, insults, and persecutions, he wasn’t surrendering to survival mode. He was rising up. He was saying, “This is my moment to fight—and my King already guaranteed the win.”
The word grace (charis) means God’s enablement—His supernatural strength to do what we could never do on our own. When God told Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you,” He wasn’t offering survival; He was offering capacity.
Grace isn’t about surviving suffering; isn’t just enough to endure—it’s the leverage to advance. That’s why Paul could take pleasure in being “weak.” Because he realized he was never actually in a position of weakness.
Paul understood something we’re rarely taught: grace is strategy mode. Grace doesn’t show up to soften the blow—it shows up to sharpen your strategy.
The moment Paul aligned with heaven’s perspective, everything shifted.
When Paul saw what God saw, he stopped reacting—and started strategizing.
The Greek word for perfected—as in, “My power is made perfect in weakness”—means complete, brought to its intended goal. God’s power reaches its intended goal when we stop asking him to remove the thorns and start using our faith to make the thorns of no effect.
And here’s the big kicker: Paul’s weakness didn’t activate God’s power. His agreement with God did.
When Paul stopped seeing himself as powerless and started seeing himself as positioned—grace could do its work. The moment he aligned with God’s view of his situation, he shifted from victim to strategist.
That’s why Paul’s “thorn” couldn’t stop him.
There’s been plenty of debate about what Paul’s “thorn in the flesh” was. Many preachers say, “We don’t really know.”
But reading the verse in context paints a different picture.
In all other places in scripture where a “thorn in the flesh” is used it relates to people. Paul’s “thorn” wasn’t sickness—it was people. The haters, naysayers, and rabble-rousers who used their free will and free speech to slander and torment him. God didn’t remove them, because removing their free will would violate His nature.
But He did something better.
God gave Paul grace that was more than enough—grace to rise above the torment, outthink his critics, and outlast and outclass every attack.
Because where sin abounds, grace abounds more.
It means when you’re surrounded—by stress, criticism, loss, or limitation—you’re not actually in a weak position. You’re in a strength zone.
You’re standing in the same space Paul did:
But your weakness isn’t your qualification—the qualifier is your agreement that weakness is a strength zone for you.
You’re not losing ground—you’re taking it.
Unstoppable looks good on you ;)
If this message hit home, you’ll love my book From Prosperity to Providence—a bold, truth-telling guide to disentangle success and suffering so you can get life to work!
www.prosperitytoprovidence.com
*https://www.chaimbentorah.com/2019/01/hebrew-aramaic-word-study-a-good-kind-of-pain/

president | speaker | author
Leadership Mentor | Cultural Strategist
I back women who are done watching the world burn while being told to “just journal about it".
Women like you who are done with the fluff, built for the fight, and ready to rebuild what culture broke.
Whether you grew up on mixtapes or memes, you know something’s off—and you’re not here to vibe your way through the apocalypse.
If you’ve got grit in your gut and a mandate on your life, you’re in the right place. We don’t echo here—we take ground.


Monday, February 02, 2026

Monday, February 02, 2026
Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Christy Narsi

“But He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That’s why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9–10
If you’ve ever heard this verse used to tell you to embrace suffering for suffering’s sake, you’re not alone. Many people interpret Paul’s words to mean we should enjoy pain, hardship, and persecution—as though being crushed is somehow the goal.
But that’s not what Paul was saying at all.
He wasn’t delighting in the pain. He delighted that grace met him in every position. His position looked like weakness to the world but from God’s perspective, Paul’s position hadn’t changed anything.
When Paul was strong in the Lord, he was strong in the Lord. When Paul was weak in circumstances, he was still strong in the Lord.
Paul needed God to remind him that nothing had changed.
In Aramaic, the word Paul used for delight is tseva—a word that originally carried a dual meaning. Yes, it meant to take pleasure in, but it also meant a battle cry—a declaration to fight to the finish for the pleasure of your King*.
When Paul said he “took pleasure” in weaknesses, insults, and persecutions, he wasn’t surrendering to survival mode. He was rising up. He was saying, “This is my moment to fight—and my King already guaranteed the win.”
The word grace (charis) means God’s enablement—His supernatural strength to do what we could never do on our own. When God told Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you,” He wasn’t offering survival; He was offering capacity.
Grace isn’t about surviving suffering; isn’t just enough to endure—it’s the leverage to advance. That’s why Paul could take pleasure in being “weak.” Because he realized he was never actually in a position of weakness.
Paul understood something we’re rarely taught: grace is strategy mode. Grace doesn’t show up to soften the blow—it shows up to sharpen your strategy.
The moment Paul aligned with heaven’s perspective, everything shifted.
When Paul saw what God saw, he stopped reacting—and started strategizing.
The Greek word for perfected—as in, “My power is made perfect in weakness”—means complete, brought to its intended goal. God’s power reaches its intended goal when we stop asking him to remove the thorns and start using our faith to make the thorns of no effect.
And here’s the big kicker: Paul’s weakness didn’t activate God’s power. His agreement with God did.
When Paul stopped seeing himself as powerless and started seeing himself as positioned—grace could do its work. The moment he aligned with God’s view of his situation, he shifted from victim to strategist.
That’s why Paul’s “thorn” couldn’t stop him.
There’s been plenty of debate about what Paul’s “thorn in the flesh” was. Many preachers say, “We don’t really know.”
But reading the verse in context paints a different picture.
In all other places in scripture where a “thorn in the flesh” is used it relates to people. Paul’s “thorn” wasn’t sickness—it was people. The haters, naysayers, and rabble-rousers who used their free will and free speech to slander and torment him. God didn’t remove them, because removing their free will would violate His nature.
But He did something better.
God gave Paul grace that was more than enough—grace to rise above the torment, outthink his critics, and outlast and outclass every attack.
Because where sin abounds, grace abounds more.
It means when you’re surrounded—by stress, criticism, loss, or limitation—you’re not actually in a weak position. You’re in a strength zone.
You’re standing in the same space Paul did:
But your weakness isn’t your qualification—the qualifier is your agreement that weakness is a strength zone for you.
You’re not losing ground—you’re taking it.
Unstoppable looks good on you ;)
If this message hit home, you’ll love my book From Prosperity to Providence—a bold, truth-telling guide to disentangle success and suffering so you can get life to work!
www.prosperitytoprovidence.com
*https://www.chaimbentorah.com/2019/01/hebrew-aramaic-word-study-a-good-kind-of-pain/

Monday, February 02, 2026
Most people think consistency is a discipline problem—but it's actually a safety issue. Your brain won't build habits under threat, which is why pushing harder backfires. Learn why safety and agency are the real keys to lasting change, and the three simple steps to rebuild consistency from the ground up.

Saturday, January 17, 2026
Most people don’t abandon their goals because they’re weak — they abandon them because they leave the option of returning to the life they said they’d leave. Abraham didn’t just believe God; he faced his tent toward the promise and away from the trash heap. Scripture calls this the “put off / put on” pattern of transformation: remove the escape path, activate desire toward the future. When you eliminate the option of quitting, momentum is no longer a mystery.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025
If you’ve ever stepped into a leadership role—civic, grassroots, elected, executive, or emerging—you already know this: . Your inbox is communicating. Your community is communicating. The culture is communicating. But here’s the paradox: In a world where everyone communicates, it's not the leaders who are that loudest that are actually heard.

Tuesday, November 04, 2025
My son-in-law took one look and said, “It looks like a fairy made it.” The name stuck. It’s light, sparkly, and just whimsical enough to make everyone smile. So now, it’s officially called Cranberry Pear Fairy Fluff—and it’s not leaving the holiday menu anytime soon. The tart cranberries, the sweet pears, the mini-marshmallow fun, and that spicy, ginger cookie crunch on top? It’s holiday magic in a bowl.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Many people interpret Paul’s words to mean we should enjoy pain, hardship, and persecution—as though being crushed is somehow the goal. But that’s not what Paul was saying at all. He wasn’t delighting in the pain. He delighted that grace met him in every position. His position looked like weakness to the world but from God’s perspective, Paul’s position hadn’t changed anything.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025
PHOENIX, AZ — Freedom Academy, a K–8 charter school known for defending childhood and restoring trust in education, announced today that it has officially signed the Pledge to Parents©, becoming the first school in the nation to do so. “The Pledge to Parents isn’t political—it’s principled,” said Christy Narsi, President of Freedom Academy. “Parents deserve schools that honor their role, will not lie about biological reality, and will educate—not indoctrinate. Signing this pledge wasn’t a new direction for us—it was simply putting in ink what’s already in our DNA, and what should be in the DNA in every school.”

president | speaker | author
Leadership Mentor
Cultural Strategist
I back women who are done watching the world burn while being told to “just journal about it".
Women like you who are done with the fluff, built for the fight, and ready to rebuild what culture broke.
Whether you grew up on mixtapes or memes, you know something’s off—and you’re not here to vibe your way through the apocalypse.
If you’ve got grit in your gut and a mandate on your life, you’re in the right place.
We don’t echo here—we take ground.

Copyright © 2025 ProsperityToProvidence.com | All Rights Reserved.
None of the content (videos, descriptions, links, eBooks and comments) created by me, Christy Narsi, is medical advice or a treatment plan and is intended for general education and demonstration purposes only. This content is not intended to diagnose or to treat any psychological or physical health condition, and nothing contained in the content should be misconstrued as such. Every individual who follows these teachings are free-willed agents of the belief in their own hearts. I cannot guarantee your personal results will be the same as mine as I cannot know the inner workings of your heart the way God does.
Copyright © 2025 ProsperityToProvidence.com | All Rights Reserved.
None of the content (videos, descriptions, links, eBooks and comments) created by me, Christy Narsi, is medical advice or a treatment plan and is intended for general education and demonstration purposes only. This content is not intended to diagnose or to treat any psychological or physical health condition, and nothing contained in the content should be misconstrued as such. Every individual who follows these teachings are free-willed agents of the belief in their own hearts. I cannot guarantee your personal results will be the same as mine as I cannot know the inner workings of your heart the way God does.