• If You Can't Lead Your Emotions You Can't Lead People
    Mar 7 2026

    Emotional leadership is not optional. If you can’t lead your emotions, you can’t lead people without eventually wounding them.


    Emotional leadership is a biblical issue before it is a practical one. In this message, Michael Martin shows from Proverbs 4, Luke 6, James 1, Galatians 5, Numbers 20, Philippians 4, and Matthew 26 that God calls leaders to shepherd their inner life before they guide others.

    Scripture reveals that unmanaged anger, anxiety, pride, and reactivity do not stay private—they spill into tone, decisions, and influence.

    This teaching calls Christian leaders to guard the heart, submit strong emotion to God, and pursue Spirit-formed self-control that reflects the character of Christ.


    📍 WHAT'S COVERED:

    • Why emotional leadership begins with guarding the heart
    • What Luke 6 teaches about the mouth revealing the inner life
    • Why anger must be governed, not excused, in leadership
    • The fruit of the Spirit and self-control in Christian leadership
    • How Moses misrepresented God through unmanaged emotion
    • How prayer, peace, and surrender reshape a leader’s reactions
    • What it means to let Christ rule your inner life


    Michael Martin is the founder of The Hustle Is Holy, a formation ecosystem for Christian entrepreneurs, founders, leaders, and builders navigating the pressure of faith and work.

    THIH exists to help high-capacity believers confront internal fragmentation, reject performative strength, and build lives shaped by spiritual formation, Christian leadership, and deep obedience to Jesus.

    This channel explores biblical leadership, emotional health and discipleship, faith-driven entrepreneurship, inner life formation, and the hard work of becoming whole under God’s rule.

    If you are asking questions like what does the Bible say about ambition, how do Christian entrepreneurs avoid burnout, or how should leaders manage anger, fear, and anxiety without harming people, this work exists for that exact tension at thehustleisholy.net.


    Step deeper into the THIH ecosystem if you want formation that strengthens both your leadership and your inner life under Christ.


    📈 The Hustle Is Holy: A Formation Ecosystem

    🏗️ The Next Stone: https://thehustleisholy.net/dtft/
    📖 Deepen the Work: https://go.thehustleisholy.net/prayer
    🌐 Enter the Cathedral: https://www.thehustleisholy.net
    📬 Mailing Address: 1341 W Mockingbird Ln, 600 West 689, Dallas, TX 75247

    #TheHustleIsHoly #EmotionalLeadership #ChristianLeadership #SelfControl #GuardYourHeart

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    13 mins
  • The Blessing & Bondage of Money
    Feb 21 2026


    The Blessing & Bondage of Money

    Money is quiet—but it reveals everything.

    It shapes decisions. It exposes loyalties. It tests contentment. And Scripture speaks with remarkable balance: money is a tool, the love of money is a danger, and God’s blessing is real—but it must never replace God Himself.

    In this teaching, The Blessing and the Bondage: Keeping Money in Its Proper Place, we walk from Genesis 1 to 1 Timothy 6, uncovering a simple but searching truth:

    Creation was declared “very good.”
    Money was never declared ultimate.

    Money is not evil. But it is powerful. And what it becomes in your life depends entirely on your heart.

    If you’ve ever wondered:

    • Is wealth a blessing or a distraction?
    • Why does money feel so spiritually loaded?
    • How do I earn, save, and give without drifting from God?
    • Can ambition be holy?

    This message is for you.

    There was a season when I measured peace by margin in my bank account. When income dipped, anxiety rose. When income rose, pride quietly followed. Scripture confronted me gently but clearly:

    “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” (Matthew 6:21)

    The Lord wasn’t after my budget. He was after my devotion.

    Hebrews 13:5 became personal:
    “I will never leave you nor forsake you.”

    Contentment isn’t about having little. It’s about knowing Who holds you.

    If money has felt heavy in your life—whether through scarcity or success—this study will steady you. God is not intimidated by your ambition, and He is not absent in your provision. He simply refuses to share His throne.

    Scripture draws a line we often blur:

    • Creation = declared good (Genesis 1:31)
    • Money = morally responsive tool
    • Love of money = root of all kinds of evil (1 Timothy 6:10)

    The issue is not possession. It’s allegiance.

    Jesus said plainly:

    “You cannot serve God and money.” (Matthew 6:24)

    So we must ask:

    • Has provision become identity?
    • Has diligence become pride?
    • Has security shifted from God to numbers?

    Deuteronomy 8 warns prosperity can produce forgetfulness.
    Paul warns wealth can relocate hope.
    Proverbs reminds us: Better a little with the fear of the Lord.

    The blessing becomes bondage the moment it replaces the Blesser.

    Here’s the biblical recalibration:

    1. Gain it righteously. (Proverbs 11:1)
    2. Hold it loosely. (1 Timothy 6:17)
    3. Use it generously. (1 Timothy 6:18)
    4. Anchor hope in God alone. (Hebrews 13:5)

    Money must serve worship—not compete with it.

    Ask yourself this week:

    • Does my giving reflect trust?
    • Does my spending reflect stewardship?
    • Does my anxiety reveal misplaced hope?

    Holiness in finances isn’t about restriction.
    It’s about rightful order.

    Work hard—but only under the weight of grace, not guilt.

    🙏 Need Prayer:
    https://go.thehustleisholy.net/prayer

    ☕ Support the Mission:
    CashApp: https://cash.me/$thehustleisholy
    Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/THIH

    🛒 Gumroad Library:
    https://thehustleisholy.gumroad.com

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    16 mins
  • Spiritual Authority Requires Self-Government
    Feb 14 2026

    There is a quiet ache beneath the noise of our age.

    We are connected—but unguarded.
    Busy—but undisciplined.
    Influential—but internally unstable.

    In this sermon, we open Proverbs 25:28 and 1 Corinthians 9:24–27 to confront a sobering truth:

    Spiritual authority requires self-government.

    Not charisma.
    Not gifting.
    Not platforms.

    Self-government.

    “A man without self-control is like a city broken into and left without walls.” (Proverbs 25:28)

    God never designed His people to live exposed to every impulse and vulnerable to every temptation. From Eden to the New Jerusalem, redemption restores order—God reigning again in the human heart.

    If we want enduring influence, we must rebuild the walls.

    Maybe you feel the breach.

    The anger that flares too quickly.
    The habit that quietly masters you.
    The distraction that thins your prayer life.

    You are not alone.

    I’ve known seasons where I rebuked the enemy while neglecting my own gates—praying for deliverance when God was calling me to discipline. And by grace, He did not condemn me. He trained me.

    Scripture says the grace of God trains us (Titus 2:11–12).
    Grace does not excuse lack of discipline—it empowers transformation.

    Self-control is not self-salvation.
    It is Spirit-formed strength under the lordship of Christ.

    The apostle Paul writes:

    “I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified.” (1 Corinthians 9:27)

    Paul feared not losing salvation—but losing usefulness.

    God does not entrust public authority to those who reject private obedience.

    We cannot demand spiritual authority while neglecting spiritual governance.

    So we must ask:

    • Where are the walls broken?
    • Where has indulgence replaced vigilance?
    • Where has comfort displaced calling?

    Collapse rarely comes from one dramatic decision.
    It comes when discipline is postponed, repentance delayed, vigilance relaxed.

    Beloved—rebuild the walls.

    This message is not about perfection.
    It is about submission.

    Present your body as a living sacrifice.
    Submit your will under Christ’s rule.
    Train by grace for the long race.

    Run—not aimlessly.
    Fight—not shadowboxing.
    Endure—for an imperishable crown.

    Authority in the Kingdom flows from obedience under the King.

    Let the Holy Spirit govern your desires.
    Let Scripture order your appetites.
    Let grace train your will.

    🔑 Key Takeaway

    Spiritual authority is sustained not by gifting, but by grace-trained self-government under the lordship of Jesus Christ.

    📚 Resources Mentioned

    Proverbs 25:28
    1 Corinthians 9:24–27
    Titus 2:11–12
    Romans 12:1
    1 Peter 5:8

    🙏 Reflection & Prayer

    Where has your life grown unguarded?

    Ask the Spirit to search you—not to shame you, but to sanctify you. The same Christ who ruled His spirit in the wilderness and submitted His body to the cross now reigns to strengthen you.

    Prayer:
    Lord Jesus,
    You endured for the joy set before You. Train us by grace.
    Rebuild our walls. Govern our desires. Make us vessels fit for Your use.
    Let our authority flow from obedience.
    In Your mighty name, Amen.

    #Spiritual authority, #self-control Bible, #Proverbs 25:28 sermon, #1 Corinthians 9 explanation, #biblical discipline, #Christian self-government, #fruit of the Spirit self-control, holiness teaching, #grace and obedience, #pastoral preaching, #spiritual leadership integrity, #endurance in faith, #Hustle Is Holy

    Work hard—but only under the weight of grace, not guilt.

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    11 mins
  • Grace Trains Before It Sends
    Feb 7 2026

    Grace Trains Before It Sends

    📖 Primary Text

    Titus 2:11–14

    When Help Shows Up… and Stays

    There are moments when help arrives just in time—a light in the dark, a voice before danger, a hand when strength is gone. We know the relief of rescue.
    But Scripture presses us further: rescue alone is not enough.

    A child saved from a fire must still learn to live safely.
    A patient healed in surgery must still submit to rehabilitation.
    A sinner forgiven must still be formed.

    Grace that only pardons but never parents leaves us fragile.
    Grace that only rescues but never remains leaves us undiscipled.

    Into that tension, Titus 2 speaks with holy clarity:
    Grace does not merely arrive as a moment—grace remains as a mentor.
    Grace does not only save us from wrath; it trains us for life.
    Grace does not end in private relief; it sends a purified people with purpose.

    Grace trains before it sends.

    Saved, But Still Being Formed

    We live in a culture of instant solutions. Download. Swipe. Click.
    And salvation, in our imagination, becomes something we receive without something we enter.

    Many want Christ as Savior but resist Him as Trainer.
    Forgiveness without formation.
    Heaven secured, habits unchanged.

    But real change always requires training.
    You can be pulled from the water—but you must still learn to swim.
    You can be forgiven—but you must still learn to walk in freedom.

    Titus 2 doesn’t scold weary believers; it shepherds them.
    It doesn’t say, “Try harder.”
    It says, “Grace has appeared—and grace is at work.”

    What Grace Does According to Titus 2

    Grace Appears to Save (v.11)
    Grace didn’t evolve—it broke into history.
    Grace has a face, and His name is Jesus Christ.
    Salvation begins not with human effort but divine initiative.

    Grace Trains Us to Renounce and to Live (v.12)
    Grace becomes a teacher—a parent shaping a child.
    It teaches us to say no to ungodliness and worldly passions,
    and yes to self-controlled, upright, godly lives now.

    Grace does not excuse sin—it evicts it.
    If grace never challenges your habits, it has not yet trained your heart.

    Grace Fixes Our Hope on Christ’s Appearing (v.13)
    The Christian life is lived between two appearings:
    Grace came in humility. Glory will come in majesty.
    Clear hope produces clean living.

    Grace Sends a Redeemed People (v.14)
    Christ gave Himself to redeem, purify, and claim a people—
    zealous for good works.
    Grace doesn’t end with forgiveness; it ignites mission.

    🔑 Key Takeaway

    Grace does not rush you to the mission—
    Grace prepares you for it.

    🙏 Closing Prayer

    Lord Jesus Christ, our great God and Savior,
    Thank You for grace that came near, stayed present, and keeps working.
    Train what resists.
    Purify what compromises.
    Send us into the good works You have prepared.
    Until the day of Your appearing, keep us faithful—
    not earning grace,
    but living as those whom grace has claimed.
    Amen.

    🔗 Ministry Links

    🙏 Need Prayer:
    https://go.thehustleisholy.net/prayer

    Support the Mission:
    Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/THIH

    Grace doesn’t rush the sending—grace perfects the training.

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    14 mins
  • Corrected, Not Rejected
    Feb 1 2026

    There are seasons when God’s hand feels heavy—when conviction sharpens, comforts are removed, and the soul quietly wonders, “Did I do something wrong?” Hebrews 12 confronts that fear with gospel clarity. God’s discipline is not rejection; it is relationship. Correction is not condemnation; it is confirmation that you belong. This teaching reframes hardship not as divine displeasure, but as loving formation from a faithful Father.

    If you’ve ever mistaken pressure for punishment, you’re not alone. Many believers carry shame into seasons meant for growth. Scripture gently reminds us: “The Lord disciplines the one He loves.” God is not distant in correction—He is near, invested, and committed to your becoming. Discipline is love in work clothes, shaping what grace has already claimed.

    Hebrews 12 presses a sobering truth: the absence of discipline is not safety but distance. God refines what He values. Correction presupposes connection. If He is training you, pruning you, or pressing you, it is because you are His. Sons submit; slaves resist. How we receive correction reveals what we believe about God’s heart.

    What if this season isn’t rejection but proof? What if the pressure is not God’s anger, but His affection at work? Submit to the Father of spirits and live. Trust His hand—even when the process is painful—because His purpose is holiness, not shame; maturity, not fear. Yield to correction as an act of faith.

    📌 Key Takeaway

    God’s discipline is not evidence of His displeasure—it is proof of your belonging. He corrects what He claims, trains whom He loves, and completes what He begins.

    🙏 Reflection & Prayer

    Father, thank You that You do not abandon what You adopt. Teach us to see Your correction as care, Your discipline as love, and Your training as grace. Give us hearts that trust You—even when the process hurts. Form us into sons and daughters who reflect Your holiness. In Jesus’ name, amen.

    🔗 Standard Ministry Links

    🙏 Need Prayer:
    https://go.thehustleisholy.net/prayer

    📬 Mailing Address:
    The Hustle Is Holy
    1341 W Mockingbird Ln
    600 West 689
    Dallas, TX 75247

    Work hard—but only under the weight of grace, not guilt.

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    13 mins
  • What You Refuse To Discipline God Will Expose
    Jan 31 2026

    There is a quiet resistance in the human heart.
    When correction comes close, we step back.
    When exposure threatens, we hide.
    When discipline presses in, we explain, excuse, and delay.

    Hebrews 12 confronts that reflex with holy clarity. What we refuse to discipline does not disappear—it is eventually exposed. Not because God delights in shame, but because He is a Father who refuses to let destruction grow unchecked in His children. Discipline is not God turning away; it is God drawing near with intent to save.

    Many of us were taught—directly or indirectly—that love avoids discomfort. So when conviction arises, we scroll past it. When God presses on a habit, an attitude, or a hidden compromise, we call it “grace” and move on. But Scripture offers a gentler, truer comfort: God corrects because He loves. Exposure is not cruelty; it is mercy intensified. The Father exposes what He intends to heal.

    Hebrews 12 makes an uncomfortable but freeing declaration:
    “If you are left without discipline… you are not sons.”

    Absence of discipline is not grace—it is abandonment. God’s correction is proof of belonging. What we ignore privately, God may reveal publicly—not to humiliate us, but to rescue us. He whispers before He shouts. He convicts before He exposes. Discipline rejected today often becomes exposure tomorrow.

    What conviction have you been dismissing?
    What obedience have you been delaying?
    What sin have you been managing instead of surrendering?

    Discipline now prevents greater judgment later. Repentance now is always gentler than exposure later. Today, choose surrender over secrecy. Yield to the Father’s hand and let Him train you for holiness—the peaceful fruit that only comes through loving correction.

    📌 Key Takeaway

    What you refuse to discipline, God will expose—not to shame you, but to share His holiness with you.

    🙏 Reflection & Prayer

    Father of spirits,
    Train us as sons and daughters.
    Expose what we have hidden.
    Heal what we have avoided.
    Form in us the peaceful fruit of righteousness.
    We surrender our pride, our secrecy, and our resistance.
    We trust that Your discipline is love—
    strong enough to save,
    gentle enough to restore,
    faithful enough to finish what You began.
    Through Jesus Christ our Lord, amen.

    🔗 Standard Ministry Links

    🙏 Need Prayer:
    https://go.thehustleisholy.net/prayer

    📬 Mailing Address:
    The Hustle Is Holy
    1341 W Mockingbird Ln
    600 West 689
    Dallas, TX 75247

    What God exposes, He intends to redeem. Work hard—but only under the weight of grace, not guilt.

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    10 mins
  • Living Intentionally for Christ
    Nov 23 2025

    Most believers do not fail because of sin alone, they fail because of drift.

    This message confronts the quiet compromises, lazy patterns, and unintentional choices that pull us away from God. Living intentionally for Christ is about clarity, discipline, alignment, and the courage to face the truth about ourselves so God can mature us

    .



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thehustleisholy.substack.com

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    17 mins
  • The Lord Who Rebukes the Darkness | Christ’s Authority
    Dec 28 2025

    When Authority Is TestedThere are moments when darkness presses close, when accusation grows loud, when thoughts resist obedience, when truth feels contested. In those moments, the real question is never how strong you are, but who truly reigns. This sermon is not about the power of darkness. It is about the Lord who rebukes it with a word.

    Christ’s Supreme AuthorityScripture does not portray Jesus as one authority among many. He is the One before whom all other powers fall silent. When Christ speaks, unclean spirits obey. When Christ commands, resistance collapses. He does not borrow authority. He embodies it. From the synagogue to the cross, from resurrection to ascension, the Bible declares one truth without apology: all authority in heaven and on earth belongs to Jesus Christ.

    This message walks through the courtroom of accusation, the cross as the place of final rebuke, and the finished work where darkness was stripped, exposed, and defeated. It anchors our confidence not in human strength, spiritual noise, or borrowed language—but in Christ alone.

    Rest in a Finished VictoryIf you are weary from fighting battles you were never meant to win in your own strength, this sermon is for you. The believer does not fight for victory; the believer stands in victory. “It is finished” was not symbolic; it was final. The accuser is silenced not because the charges were weak, but because the sentence was already carried out at the cross. There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.

    This is the Christ-centered theology of work and warfare that The Hustle Is Holy means biblically: obedience before output, submission before resistance, and rest as an act of faith.

    Submit Before You ResistScripture is clear: resistance without submission is noise. Authority flows only from alignment with Christ. Every thought must be taken captive. Every competing voice must bow. This message calls the Church away from striving, shouting, and self-reliance,

    and back to humble, joyful submission under the Lordship of Jesus Christ.

    Bow to the King Who ReignsThe question is not whether darkness exists. The question is who reigns. And Scripture answers without hesitation: at the name of Jesus every knee will bow. This sermon invites you to surrender false authority, silence accusation, and live under the reign of the King whose victory is already complete.

    ResourcesPillar Teaching: What The Hustle Is Holy means biblicallyStudy Scriptures: Mark 1:25, Matthew 28:18, Colossians 2:15, James 4:7

    Key TakeawayDarkness does not retreat because we shout louder. It retreats when Christ reigns.

    🙏 Need Prayer:https://go.thehustleisholy.net/prayer



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thehustleisholy.substack.com

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    8 mins