Day 3 — Risk as Worship
A daily doxa way series for the UK church: What They Gave Up, What They Gained
Walk any British street and you can feel it—the carefulness. We measure our words. We read the room. We choose safe. At school gates. In NHS corridors. On studio floors and council calls. We’re kind, but quiet. The risk for us is that we are being discipled by silence and being polite.
This series is for anyone who knows they’re called to open their mouth. Prophetic courage steadies us in a world of resistance and pulls us into the future God has promised. Grace first. Overflow, not effort.
Today’s trade
Today we’re looking at the trade made by each of Esther, Peter, Daniel, and Shadrach, Meshach & Abednego—with Ananias of Damascus alongside them—who gave up safety and comfort and gained God’s nearness in danger and fresh opportunities to witness. Let’s dive into their stories.
Gave up: safety and comfort.
Gained: God’s nearness in danger and doors no fear could open.
There is always fire on acceptable sacrifice.
Esther — stepping into the throne room (Esther 4–7)
Context: In the Persian court, approaching the king uninvited could mean death. A royal edict—driven by Haman—threatens all Jews in the empire.
Scene: quiet corridors, fasting breath, a queen in royal robes walking toward a guarded door.
Gave up: royal safety, anonymity, and the option to wait for a better time.
Courageous act/words: She entered without summons; later exposed Haman’s plot at a private banquet. “If I perish, I perish” framed her choice.
How it likely felt: pulse loud in her ears; every step a calculation of cost.
Felt cost: potential execution, loss of position, political backlash.
Gained: favour before the king, a turned decree, protection for her people.
Fire on the sacrifice: the sceptre lowered; the threat reversed; honour spread to a displaced people.
Peter — speaking under orders to be silent (Acts 4–5)
Context: After a public healing at the temple, the council arrests the apostles and commands them to stop speaking about Jesus.
Scene: the tiled chill of a council chamber; later, the rattle of a prison door.
Gave up: legal safety, popularity, and the option to return to a quiet life.
Courageous act/words: “We cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard” (4:20). He preached Christ to the very authorities who jailed him.
How it likely felt: remembering failure by a courtyard fire when he denied Jesus 3 times—and choosing boldness this time.
Felt cost: imprisonment, beating, threats, public backlash.
Gained: fresh boldness, open doors for witness, a community marked by courage and joy.
Fire on the sacrifice: God kept opening rooms and roads; the message ran faster than the opposition.
Daniel — praying with the window open (Daniel 6)
Context: Advisors manipulate a law that no one may petition any god or man except the king for thirty days. Violation means the lions’ den.
Scene: an upper room facing Jerusalem; the scrape of a window; the sound of prayer.
Gave up: promotion security and court favour.
Courageous act/words: He continued his normal pattern—praying three times a day—knowing the law was set.
How it likely felt: resolved, steady, aware of the trap and unwilling to hide.
Felt cost: a night with lions; potential loss of life and legacy.
Gained: deliverance, vindication, and public honour from the king.
Fire on the sacrifice: the den became a testimony; a royal decree pointed attention to God.
Shadrach, Meshach & Abednego — refusing the image (Daniel 3)
Context: The king erects a golden image; refusal to bow means the furnace.
Scene: the plain of Dura; heat shimmering from open doors of the fire.
Gave up: career prospects, imperial favour, and their lives if not rescued.
Courageous act/words: “Our God is able to deliver us… but even if He does not, we will not bow.”
How it likely felt: heat on their faces; pressure from peers; an inner resolve that did not bend.
Felt cost: being bound and thrown into flames.
Gained: deliverance, promotion, and a public decree honouring God.
Fire on the sacrifice: the literal fire became a meeting place; a fourth figure walked with them.
Ananias of Damascus — knocking on the enemy’s door (Acts 9:10–19)
Context: Saul has been arresting believers. After encountering Jesus on the road, he waits in Damascus, blind and fasting. Ananias is a disciple in that city.
Scene: a narrow street; the quiet of a house where a feared man sits sightless.
Gave up: anonymity and personal safety.
Courageous act/words: He walked in, laid hands on Saul, and said, “Brother Saul,” giving healing and a commission.
How it likely felt: fear and obedience wrestling; choosing trust over self‑protection.
Felt cost: risk of betrayal; suspicion from his own community.
Gained: the healing and commissioning of a man God would use powerfully; the church’s future widened.
Fire on the sacrifice: God’s Presence turned an enemy into a brother through one faithful visit.
Conclusion
We don’t chase danger; we follow Jesus. When love says “step,” the place of risk becomes the place of encounter with Him. Let these stories steady your heart: God meets those who entrust their safety to Him, and what we lay down becomes seed for others.
Tomorrow: Open‑Handed Prophets — Amos, Barnabas, Phoebe, Rahab, and Noah. The trade: giving up wealth and convenience to serve people and strengthen God’s work.
We are bulding the doxa app to better remember what God has promised (prophecies) and what he has done (testimonies) so we can fight the good fight (and win).


