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Step-by-step frameworks to help you lead into a new future.
100,000+ Views Across All Platforms | 96% Likes This Video
Step-by-step frameworks to help you lead into a new future.
100,000+ Views Across All Platforms | 96% Likes This Video

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Here’s the uncomfortable truth most people don’t want to say out loud:
Your biggest problem might actually be your greatest opportunity.
Most leaders spend their entire lives trying to avoid Goliaths.
They pray for God to remove them.
They fast for God to silence them.
They hope someone else will fight them.
But the story of David tells us something radically different.
Goliath was never meant to destroy David.
Goliath was meant to introduce David to the world.
And that changes everything.
Because the moment David defeated Goliath, he went from an unknown shepherd to a national leader overnight.
Your giant might be doing the exact same thing for you.
Most people misunderstand the role of adversity.
They think difficulty means something is wrong.
But Scripture tells a different story.
David didn’t meet Goliath when he was unprepared.
He met Goliath after years of hidden preparation.
Before the giant ever showed up, David had already:
Fought lions
Fought bears
Developed skill with a sling
Learned courage in private
The battlefield didn’t build David.
It revealed him.
Your Goliath works the same way.
When a giant appears in your life, it usually means your private preparation is about to go public.
And that’s terrifying for many people.
But it’s also the doorway to your next level.
Not every giant carries a sword and shield.
Most modern Goliaths look very different.
Fear is the giant that paralyzes leaders before they ever step onto the battlefield.
It whispers things like:
“You’re not ready.”
“You’re not qualified.”
“Someone else could do this better.”
The Israelites heard that voice for 40 days.
David heard it once—and ran toward the giant.
The difference between leaders and spectators often comes down to who moves first.
Many leaders never lose to external opposition.
They lose to internal voices.
Self-doubt convinces you that:
Your vision is too big
Your church is too small
Your resources are too limited
Your influence is insignificant
But the truth is this:
David didn’t defeat Goliath because he was the strongest man on the battlefield.
He defeated Goliath because he understood his advantage.
Your difference might be your greatest weapon.
This is the giant almost nobody talks about.
Many leaders think their problem is spiritual warfare.
In reality, their problem is infrastructure.
You can have incredible vision.
You can preach powerful messages.
You can have a heart for people.
But if your ministry has no systems, growth becomes unsustainable.
And when growth becomes unsustainable, the pressure crushes leaders.
That’s why one of the most overlooked battles in ministry is organizational capacity.
If you don’t build systems, eventually you become the system.
And that’s a fight nobody can win forever.
Most people focus on the moment David threw the stone.
But the real victory happened long before that.
David won because he had three things:
David knew exactly who he was.
He wasn’t trying to wear Saul’s armor.
He wasn’t trying to fight like other soldiers.
He fought with what he already had.
Many leaders get stuck because they spend more time copying others than understanding themselves.
David didn’t learn how to use a sling in front of the giant.
He learned it in the field.
The private season prepared him for the public moment.
Too many people want the platform without embracing the preparation.
But giants don’t reveal amateurs.
They reveal preparation.
At some point, David had to move.
Faith without action is just theology.
Vision without movement is just daydreaming.
David ran toward the giant.
And sometimes that’s the most important step any leader takes.
Here’s the controversial part:
Some leaders never defeat their Goliath because they’re trying to negotiate with it.
But Goliaths don’t negotiate.
They intimidate.
They mock.
They stall progress.
And they keep showing up until someone decides to confront them.
Your giant will keep appearing in your life until you deal with it once and for all.
That’s the moment when things begin to shift.
There’s another truth that many leaders are starting to recognize.
Churches today are not failing because people don’t want God.
They’re struggling because systems haven’t kept up with the mission.
Great preaching is powerful.
But great preaching without systems eventually leads to burnout.
Vision without structure leads to frustration.
And passion without strategy leads to stagnation.
That’s why many churches are beginning to focus not just on inspiration, but also on infrastructure.
Because healthy growth requires both.
Every leader eventually reaches a moment where they have to ask themselves one simple question:
Will I run from the giant… or run toward it?
Because Goliath represents more than opposition.
It represents exposure.
The moment when everything you practiced in private finally steps onto a public stage.
And when that moment comes, the giant is no longer just an enemy.
It becomes the platform where your leadership is revealed.
Every generation faces giants.
But every generation also produces Davids.
The difference isn’t talent.
The difference isn’t resources.
The difference is the willingness to step forward when everyone else steps back.
Because at the end of the day, the truth remains simple:
Every giant can fall.
The real question is whether someone will pick up the stone.
But here’s the part many leaders don’t talk about.
David didn’t just have courage.
He also had a system for the fight.
He knew his weapon.
He knew his strategy.
He knew how to use what was already in his hands.
And that’s where many churches are struggling today.
Not because they lack passion.
Not because they lack calling.
But because they’re trying to fight modern Goliaths with no systems, no structure, and no strategy.
That’s exactly why we created Church Systems in a Box.
It’s designed to help pastors and leaders build the systems that actually support growth - from leadership development and assimilation to outreach and digital strategy.
And for churches ready to move even faster, the Church Systems Accelerator walks leaders step-by-step through implementing those systems so they can break through the gates that have been holding them back.
Because here’s the reality:
Too many churches are closing their doors, not because God stopped moving, but because the systems stopped working.
And we refuse to watch that happen.
So if you know your church is called to more…
If you know there’s a harvest in your city…
If you know you’re standing in front of a giant that’s been taunting you for too long…
Then maybe this is your moment to pick up the stone.
And if you need help building the systems to fight the battle in front of you…
That’s exactly what we’re here for.

Henry Tolbert is a church growth strategist who's helped over 1,000 pastors implement systems that scale. With 15+ years of ministry experience, he specializes in helping churches break through growth barriers without burning out their leadership teams.

Helping church leaders build, grow, and sustain impactful ministries through proven systems and strategies.

Helping church leaders build, grow, and sustain impactful ministries through proven systems and strategies.
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