Day 6 — From Quiet to Public
A daily doxa series for the UK church: What They Gave Up, What They Gained
There’s a quiet revival underway in the UK—kitchen tables, school gates, studio floors, hospital wards. Not loud, but steady. God is moving in ordinary places, and stories are beginning to surface. We actively remember what God has promised and what He has already done so we can fight the good fight and win. That remembering fills us, and love starts asking for a voice.
Prophetic courage isn’t volume; it’s obedience born from love. Grace first. Overflow, not striving.
Today’s trade
Before we dive in, a reminder of the journey we’re on. This daily doxa series traces a simple pattern we call the trade: someone lays down what they already have (reputation, safety, position, comfort, control), and God gives something better (clarity, freedom, courage, fruit) as they obey. If you’re joining mid-way, you can scroll back to earlier days—Day 1: Reputation → Day 2: Position & Influence → Day 3: Safety → Day 4: Open-Handed Obedience → Day 5: Truth in the Family—and see how remembering what God has promised and already done steadies us to fight the good fight and win.
Today we’re looking at the trade made by Mary, Elizabeth, Anna, and the shepherds—with Eldad & Medad alongside them—who gave up anonymity and routine and gained a God-given assignment that spread joy. Let’s dive into their stories.
Gave up: anonymity, privacy, and the safety of staying quiet.
Gained: a clear assignment and joy that spilled into communities.
There is always fire on acceptable sacrifice.
Mary (mother of Jesus) — singing public theology in a kitchen (Luke 1:39–56)
Context: A young woman from Nazareth visits her older relative Elizabeth in the Judean hills while newly pregnant. In a small-town culture, questions will come.
Scene: two women embracing; a house filled with the sound of blessing.
Gave up: a reputation without questions; the quiet option to keep her story private.
Courageous act/words: She lifted her voice in the Magnificat, naming God’s mercy, His lifting of the humble, and His scattering of the proud—out loud, for others to hear.
How it likely felt: relief and resolve; aware her words would travel faster than she could.
Felt cost: community scrutiny; the loss of anonymity.
Gained: a truer name and a public witness to God’s work; courage that still strengthens the church.
Fire on the sacrifice: her song turned a home into a sanctuary and set a tone for generations.
Elizabeth — blessing loudly against custom (Luke 1:39–45; 57–66)
Context: An older woman, long childless, now carrying a son. Neighbours and relatives gather for his circumcision and naming; custom expects the child to take the father’s name.
Scene: crowded room; expectant faces; a quiet debate over names.
Gave up: the safety of going along with family tradition.
Courageous act/words: She cried out with a loud voice blessing Mary, and at her own child’s naming insisted, “He is to be called John,” aligning with God’s purpose rather than custom.
How it likely felt: joy edged with nerves; choosing clarity over convenience.
Felt cost: social friction in a close community.
Gained: the forerunner named as God intended; neighbours filled with awe.
Fire on the sacrifice: obedience mid-celebration became a sign that loosened many tongues in praise.
Anna — giving her voice to the waiting (Luke 2:36–38)
Context: An elderly widow, known for worship and prayer at the temple. Many in Jerusalem are longing for consolation.
Scene: temple courts at daybreak; a Child in His parents’ arms; faces lined with longing.
Gave up: the protection of quiet anonymity.
Courageous act/words: She came up at that very hour, gave thanks to God, and spoke about the Child to all who were waiting for redemption.
How it likely felt: full-hearted; long prayers finally spilling over into speech.
Felt cost: being dismissed as overly devout; the vulnerability of public joy.
Gained: a credible, seasoned witness; consolation for many who had waited.
Fire on the sacrifice: decades of hidden faith became fuel for a public announcement.
The Shepherds — taking good news to the street (Luke 2:8–20)
Context: Night fields near Bethlehem; low-status workers whose testimony often carried little weight. After seeing the Child, they must decide what to do with what they’ve heard and seen.
Scene: breath in the cold; a stable’s hush; then a road back through sleeping streets.
Gave up: sleep, caution, and the safety of keeping their heads down.
Courageous act/words: They “made known the saying that had been told them” and glorified God in public.
How it likely felt: giddy; a little out of their depth; determined not to keep this to themselves.
Felt cost: possible ridicule; time away from work.
Gained: shared wonder; a town stirred to marvel.
Fire on the sacrifice: ordinary voices carried extraordinary news—and joy spread.
Eldad & Medad — prophesying outside the tent (Numbers 11:24–29)
Context: Moses gathers seventy elders at the tent for commissioning. Two men, Eldad and Medad, remain in the camp but still begin to prophesy there.
Scene: the camp buzzes; a runner breathless with news; Joshua urges Moses to stop them.
Gave up: the safety of strict protocol and staying unnoticed.
Courageous act/words: They spoke as God enabled, in an unexpected place; Moses refused to silence them and longed for more people to carry God’s Spirit.
How it likely felt: exposed; unsure if they were stepping out of line; grateful for Moses’ covering.
Felt cost: scrutiny from loyalists; suspicion about breaking pattern.
Gained: widened expectation for how God might use ordinary people.
Fire on the sacrifice: their public voice stretched the camp’s imagination of participation.
Conclusion
Revival doesn’t always arrive on a stage. It leaks through kitchens, courtyards, and night shifts—whenever remembered promises and fresh testimonies of God’s goodness find a willing mouth. Love speaks, and joy spreads. May these voices nudge us from quiet to public, with tenderness and steel, as we walk with God’s Presence.
Tomorrow: Letting God Lead the Outcome — Habakkuk, Abraham, Job, Jonah, and James of Jerusalem. The trade: giving up control and certainty to gain deeper trust and communal clarity.
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).


