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In this first week of our series, How To Ruin Your Faith, we’re reminded that faith doesn’t usually fall apart all at once—it drifts. Like swimmers slowly carried by a current, nothing feels wrong at first. Everything seems normal. But over time, we can find ourselves far from where we started. In our walk with Jesus, drift is subtle. It shows up in small shifts—less time in Scripture, less prayer, slowly justifying things we once felt convicted about. Paul’s response in Galatians is urgent because this kind of drift can happen quickly, and often without us realizing it. In our church family, this invites us to honestly ask: where have we grown casual in areas that once mattered deeply?

As we grow together in faith, we’re called to be re-anchored in the true gospel—Jesus plus nothing. The Galatians didn’t reject Jesus; they added to Him. And we can do the same by mixing in performance, approval, personal truth, or control. But the gospel isn’t about what we bring—it’s about what Jesus has already done. When we start reshaping truth, building identity apart from Christ, or seeking acceptance over faithfulness, we begin to drift. So the question isn’t just, “Do I believe in Jesus?” but “Is Jesus enough for me?” The good news is no matter how far we’ve drifted, we’re never too far gone. Jesus is enough, and He is always ready to lead us back and re-anchor our lives in His truth.