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We are rewarding high performing people around the continent. Help by nominating someone you are impressed with. Together we can create a better performing Africa. Do it now!

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Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Elevating Spiritual Intelligence – The Bedrock for a God-Glorifying Life

 In 2015, I released Configure v 1.0, a year-configuration tool to help people achieve high performance by balancing several “intelligences”: Technical, Financial, Socio-Emotional, Health, Performance Theory, and Spiritual Intelligence (SI). At the time, my theology, though Christian, remained largely anthropocentric—SI was treated as one important dial among equals in the pursuit of personal success and maximised existence.







God has since reshaped my understanding through guidance and study. Consequently, Spiritual Intelligence is no longer one faculty among many—it is now the bedrock of all existence. When SI is rightly elevated, it reorients every other area of life toward its true purpose: the glory of God. Our chief end as human beings is

“to glorify God, and to enjoy Him forever” (Westminster Shorter Catechism Q1; see 1 Cor 10:31; Rom 11:36; Ps 73:25–28).

This is not an optional extra or a nice religious add-on. It is why we exist, why we were redeemed, and why every moment matters. Many sincere believers still operate from an anthropocentric default: God exists mainly to help us succeed, feel fulfilled, or solve personal problems. The result is fragmented lives—impressive on the surface, but often missing eternal weight and lasting joy.

The way forward is intentional elevation of Spiritual Intelligence through disciplined discipleship, biblical counselling(not to be confused with Christian counselling), and diligent and sound study of God’s Word. As SI rises (aim for at least 70% focus in your personal life “dashboard”), it triggers a complete worldview switch from self-centeredness to God-centered (theocentric):

  • Your job becomes worshipful service, not self-actualisation.

  • Finances serve kingdom advance, not personal empire-building.

  • Relationships reflect Christ’s love, not transactional gain.

  • Health stewards God’s temple for fruitful service, not vanity.

  • Performance is measured by faithfulness to Christ, not worldly applause.

To help you see where you stand right now, take this quick 10-point Spiritual Intelligence Self-Assessment. Rate each statement honestly on a scale of 1–5:1 = Rarely/Never true, 2 = Seldom true, 3 = Occasionally true, 4 = Frequently true, 5 = Almost always true

  1. My daily decisions and priorities are shaped first by what glorifies God, rather than what benefits or pleases me most.

  2. I regularly spend time in Scripture study and prayer, not just for personal comfort or answers, but to know God more deeply and obey Him.

  3. When facing challenges at work, in relationships, or financially, my first instinct is to seek God's perspective and kingdom purposes rather than quick fixes or self-reliance.

  4. I view my occupation (job, business, studies, etc.) primarily as an opportunity to serve and glorify God, not mainly as a means for personal success, security, or status.

  5. I actively pursue discipleship—through mentoring, accountability, biblical counselling, or structured study—so that my life increasingly reflects Christ's character.

  6. My enjoyment of God (worship, gratitude, rest in Him) flows from obedience and relationship with Him, rather than circumstances or achievements.

  7. I can clearly articulate how my current life goals and habits contribute to God's eternal purposes, rather than just my own fulfilment or happiness.

  8. I regularly confess sin, repent, and seek transformation because I desire to honour God more fully, not just to feel better or avoid consequences.

  9. My relationships (spouse, family, colleagues, church) are navigated primarily through biblical love, forgiveness, and service that point others to Christ.

  10. I experience growing freedom from worldly pressures (anxiety about money, approval, performance) as I trust God's sovereignty and live for His glory alone.

Quick Scoring (total possible: 50)

  • 40–50: Strong SI foundation – largely theocentric living. Press deeper.

  • 30–39: Moderate – good awareness, but realignment needed.

  • 20–29: Developing – anthropocentric patterns still strong. Great moment to start.

  • Below 20: Urgent attention needed – life likely feels self-driven or fragmented.

Your score is a snapshot, not a final verdict. The good news is that SI can be intentionally raised through the ordinary means of grace: Scripture, prayer, repentance, community, and godly counsel. If this assessment stirred something in you—if you want help raising SI, making the theocentric shift, and configuring your life (and year) around God’s glory—I’d love to walk with you. I’m currently offering free one-on-one discipleship/counselling sessions (30 minutes, via call or video) https://calendly.com/rooted-africa/30min to:

  • Review your assessment results

  • Identify the biggest barriers to higher SI

  • Create a simple, Scripture-based starting plan

  • Have a simple conversation on the matter

These sessions have already helped others realign their entire existence around glorifying God.To claim your free spot, reply to this post, DM me. Your life was bought with a price (1 Cor 6:20). Let’s make every part of it count for His eternal glory. Stay rooted!

Friday, February 27, 2026

People-Centrism vs. God-First: Why Human Flourishing Starts with the Creator


In a world obsessed with relationships, community, empathy, and "putting people first," it's easy to assume that centring our lives around others is the path to true fulfilment. We hear it everywhere: Build strong connections. Prioritise others. Love people well. These are good impulses—until they become the foundation rather than the fruit. What happens when we make people-centrism (an overemphasis on human relationships and potential as the centre of life) our starting point? Scripture warns us through the doctrine of total depravity: humanity, apart from God's grace, is deeply flawed and incapable of sustained righteousness. "Man and righteousness are worlds apart," as the biblical view puts it simply. People fail. Relationships fracture. Good intentions erode under selfishness, disappointment, or burnout. When we build our hope primarily on fellow creatures, discouragement is inevitable. The weight becomes pointless and burdensome. This risk extends to other-centrism—the noble idea of always putting others ahead of self. While it echoes Christ's self-sacrifice, it still forces a fundamental choice: creator or creature? Without resolving this through a biblical epistemology, we drift back into human-centred striving. The resolution is straightforward yet revolutionary: Creator over creature. Our relationship with fellow humans must flow from—and be filtered through—our relationship with God. Horizontal love (neighbour as self) is only sustainable when rooted in vertical love (God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength). Jesus Himself established this order in the two greatest commandments:

"You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself." (Matthew 22:37-39, ESV; see also Leviticus 19:18)

Notice the sequence. The first commandment is not optional or interchangeable—it's foundational. Loving God wholly shapes how we love others: with realism about sin, reliance on grace, endurance through failure, and direction from divine revelation. What we do with fellow human beings must depend on what God says. This God-first priority is the heartbeat of human flourishing at every level:

· Micro (personal life): Inner peace and purpose come from alignment with the Creator's will, not endless self-improvement or people-pleasing.

· Meso (relationships and community): Marriages, families, and churches thrive when grace-filled love flows from submission to God, not codependent expectations.

· Macro (society and culture): Justice, ethics, and social good endure only when grounded in God's unchanging agenda, not shifting human ideals.

The perfect examples? Christ and David—both from Bethlehem, the "house of bread." Jesus perfectly embodied the divine agenda: "Not my will, but yours be done" (Luke 22:42). He loved others flawlessly because He was fully submitted to the Father. David, "a man after God's own heart" (Acts 13:22), pursued God's will amid personal and relational chaos—his failures didn't derail him because his compass was the Creator. This is the core unravelling in The God-Agendum: Unravelling God's Will and Man's Purpose in the Divine Plan. The book explores how aligning with God's sovereign agenda frees us from the futility of people-centred living. It offers a roadmap to discern divine priorities, avoid relational discouragement, and experience genuine flourishing—not through optimistic humanism, but through humble dependence on the unchanging God. If you've ever felt exhausted by trying to "fix" relationships, society, or yourself through sheer human effort, consider this: True life begins when we parse people-centrism through other-centrism in the right order—Creator first.Curious to dive deeper? Explore The God-Agendum and discover how embracing God's plan transforms everything from personal purpose to communal impact.

Get a copy of the God-Agendum here. https://selar.com/fx73544j7m

Series on Jonathan Edwards' Resolutions: Resolution #11

Pursuing Theological Understanding

By Rooted Africa Jonathan Edwards had resolved to use pain for spiritual gain (Resolution 10) and to keep death always in mind (Resolution 9). Now he addressed intellectual life: when a theological question arises, act on it immediately.

Resolution 11
Resolved, when I think of any theorem in divinity to be solved, immediately to do what I can towards solving it, if circumstances don’t hinder.



In simple terms: Whenever Edwards encountered a difficult or unresolved question in theology (“divinity”), he resolved to take immediate action to study, research, or reason toward an answer—as far as circumstances allowed.This resolution reflects his lifelong passion for truth. Edwards was a brilliant thinker who wrote extensively on doctrine, philosophy, and Scripture. He refused intellectual laziness, seeing the pursuit of understanding God’s truth as part of glorifying Him.Why This Matters TodayWe live in an age of shallow thinking—quick opinions, soundbites, and scrolling past hard questions. Edwards challenges us: When Scripture, doctrine, or life raises a real question about God, don’t shrug it off or settle for easy answers. Pursue clarity with diligence, because knowing God better fuels worship, obedience, and witness.As 2 Timothy 2:15 urges: “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.”Applying Resolution 11 Practically
  • When a question arises: Don’t ignore it—note it down, then study: read Scripture, consult trusted commentaries, pray, discuss with others.
  • In Bible study or preaching: If something is unclear, commit to digging deeper rather than moving on.
  • In daily life: When theology intersects with decisions (e.g., ethics at work), seek understanding before acting.
  • Habit: Keep a “Theological Questions” journal—review and tackle one each week.
Reflection Questions
  • What theological or biblical question have I avoided or left unresolved lately?
  • How might pursuing deeper understanding strengthen my faith or witness?
  • Do I treat God’s truth as worth diligent effort, or do I settle for surface-level knowledge?
Edwards reviewed his resolutions weekly partly to stay intellectually diligent. Regular check-ins keep the mind sharp for God’s glory.Resolution 11 reminds us: Loving God with the mind is part of loving Him fully. Don’t let hard questions go unanswered.What question is stirring in you right now? Share in the comments or on X (
@kateyakli
).
We continue tomorrow with Resolution 12.This is Day 11 in our daily series on Jonathan Edwards' 70 Resolutions.References for Further Reading