Never Put Out the Fire
The Courage to Keep What’s Good
When Paul wrote these words to the believers in Jesus in Thessalonica many years ago, he was offering more than advice. He was giving them a way to keep hope alive:
Do not quench the Spirit; do not utterly reject prophecies, but examine everything; hold firmly to that which is good, abstain from every form of evil. 1 Thessalonians 5:19–22 (NASB2020)
They were learning to follow Jesus in a culture that didn’t understand them. In their city, power and status were everything. Claiming that a crucified man was King was unthinkable—and dangerous.
Yet this is what they believed: through Jesus, God’s kingdom—His way of restoring all things—had broken into history.
Paul knew how easy it is to let that fire fade. To stop expecting God to speak or act. To settle for a quiet life that requires nothing of us.
But when we do that, faith loses its power.
History shows it.
In the early 1700s, there was a small community in Germany called the Moravians. They were divided and discouraged. But when they humbled themselves and prayed, something unexpected happened: God’s Spirit moved with quiet strength. They began to care for each other, to reconcile, to live as if Jesus really was King. That small fire spread. They prayed day and night for a hundred years. They went to distant nations to bring hope and practical help. They lived like God’s kingdom had come near—and it did.
Or look at Wales in 1904. A young coal miner named Evan Roberts felt an unshakable conviction that God wanted to bring new life to his nation. People said he was too emotional, that it wouldn’t last. But towns were transformed. People laid down old grudges. Families were healed. Justice began to matter again.
It always follows the same pattern:
God stirs our hearts.
Some hesitate or push back.
The message is weighed honestly.
What is true and good is embraced.
What isn’t is set aside.
This is what Paul meant: Don’t shut out the possibility that God is speaking. But don’t swallow everything untested, either. We are called to be humble enough to listen. Wise enough to discern. Courageous enough to act.
In our own day—an age of distractions, skepticism, and easy cynicism—this challenge is the same:
Will we be the kind of people who keep the fire burning?
Will we risk appearing foolish if it means welcoming God’s restoring power?
The greatest danger isn’t making mistakes. It’s never daring to expect God at all.
So here is our invitation:
Let’s be people who make space for God to move. Who don’t rush to dismiss what we don’t yet understand. Who test everything with clear eyes and open hearts.
And when we glimpse even a spark of God’s kingdom—justice, healing, mercy, truth—we hold onto it with both hands.
Because in the end, this is how faith stays alive.
Never put out the fire.
Never look down on the words that bring hope.
Hold fast to what is good.
Trust that the God who started this work will see it through.


