Written by Thiago M. Silva, a contemporary pastor and author.
Goodness is an essential but often misunderstood element of Christian discipleship. In an age where morality is increasingly subjective and shifting, many people struggle to understand what it truly means to live a good life. The dominant cultural narrative suggests that goodness is a personal or social construct, something each individual or society defines according to its preferences. Without an objective moral standard, concepts such as justice, virtue, and righteousness lose their grounding, and goodness is reduced to mere sentimentality or pragmatism. Christian discipleship, however, insists that goodness is not merely about outward behavior but about the transformation of character according to the unchanging nature of God. Scripture consistently presents goodness as an essential characteristic of God and a defining mark of His people… One of the greatest challenges to discipleship today is the belief that morality is self-defined. Many people, even within the church, assume that as long as they are sincere and follow their hearts, they are living rightly. However, Scripture warns that “the heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure” (Jeremiah 17:9). Feelings and desires, while not inherently bad, must be shaped and purified by God’s truth…discipleship must be more than behavior modification; it must involve the transformation of desires. To be a disciple is to undergo a moral and spiritual reorientation. The goal is not simply to do good things but to become the kind of person who naturally loves and practices goodness. This process, however, is not instantaneous. It involves training, discipline, and the renewal of the mind… True discipleship must go beyond intellectual knowledge and engage the affections because people are not primarily shaped by what they think but by what they love and desire.
Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in him. [Psalm 34:8]