Week 1
Discipline for Godliness
Chapter 1
Hughes does not ease you in. He opens with a linebacker who played with an intensity most of us only dream about, then asks the question we have been avoiding: where did that fire go? He writes that a face lit by a screen is a study in passivity, and it lands in the chest. Discipline, he says, is the path, not the destination. It is how we train for godliness.
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Observation
- Paul tells Timothy to "train yourself for godliness." What word does he choose, and what kind of effort does it name?
- In Proverbs 25:28, what is a man without self-control compared to? Picture the city he describes.
- What does Hebrews 12:11 admit about discipline in the moment, and what does it promise afterward?
Interpretation
- Hughes says our screens have become a study in passivity. When you are honest, what are you numbing, and what discomfort are you avoiding?
- A city with broken walls has no defenses. Where in your life do you feel most exposed right now? What got neglected?
- What is one discipline you used to practice that quietly slipped away? What would it take to rebuild it?
One Application
Choose one area where you have drifted into passivity. Just one. Show up in that area for seven days straight, whether it is waking before your phone, ten minutes in Scripture, or being fully present at dinner. Track it with one question each night: did I show up today?
Prayer
Father, I have let my walls fall in places I would rather not name. Train me. Give me the will to do the small hard thing today, and again tomorrow, until it holds. Rebuild what I let go. Amen.
Week 2
Purity, Marriage, Fatherhood, Friendship
Chapters 2 to 5
The relational disciplines, and one thread runs through all of them: you cannot love well what you will not fight for. Hughes traces David's fall and shows it was not a sudden collapse but a slow desensitization. On marriage he says the vows are not the finish line, they are the starting gun for a lifetime of dying to self. On friendship he is blunt: "my wife is my best friend" is an excuse. You need a brother who asks the hard questions she cannot.
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Observation
- Proverbs 6:27-28 asks two questions with obvious answers. What images does it use, and what is it warning against?
- In Ephesians 5:25, what is the measure a husband's love is held to? Notice it is giving, not getting.
- Ephesians 6:4 names one thing fathers must not do and one thing they must do. What are they?
Interpretation
- Hughes asks whether you are carrying fire next to your chest. What habit or situation are you playing with that you know will eventually burn you?
- Marriage asks you to love in three dimensions: socially, emotionally, physically. Which one are you neglecting? Which requires the most death to self?
- Do you have a friend who holds you accountable and asks the hard questions? If not, what is keeping you isolated?
One Application
Fifteen minutes of intentional, phone-free time with your wife or your kids each day this week. Not logistics. Not screens in the background. Ask one real question and actually listen to the answer. At the end of the week, notice what shifted.
Prayer
Lord, teach me to fight for the people you gave me instead of drifting past them. Make me faithful in the small compromises before they become large ones. Give me one honest brother, and make me one. Amen.
Week 3
Mind, Devotion, Prayer, Worship
Chapters 6 to 9
Hughes writes, "You cannot be profoundly influenced by that which you do not know." We live in an age that is information-rich and transformation-poor. He frames devotion as covenant conversation with God, and prayer as primary spiritual work, not leisurely talk but warfare. And he asks the question that reorders everything about a Sunday: do we worship as He desires, or as we prefer?
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Observation
- Romans 12:2 sets two forces against each other. What are we told not to do, and what are we told to be?
- Psalm 1 describes the man who meditates on the Word day and night. What is he compared to, and what does he produce?
- Colossians 4:2 gives three instructions about prayer in one short verse. Name them.
Interpretation
- Hughes says we live in a haze that separates us from God, ourselves, and reality. If you tracked your screen time this week, what would it reveal about what you actually worship?
- When did you last pray desperately, not routinely, but with real need? What would change if you believed God was actually listening?
- Do you prepare for worship the way you prepare for an important meeting? What does your lack of preparation say about what you value?
One Application
Before you check your phone each morning, spend fifteen minutes in Scripture and prayer. Read one Psalm, sit with it, and talk to God about what surfaces. Do this for seven days and notice what shifts in your inner life.
Prayer
God, renew my mind where the world has shaped it. Pull me out of the haze and into your Word until it changes how I see. Teach me to pray like it is work worth doing, and to worship you for who you are. Amen.
Week 4
Integrity and the Tongue
Chapters 10 to 12
Integrity is who you are when no one is grading you. Hughes argues that a man's private life is the real one, and the public life is only its overflow. Then he turns to the tongue, the small thing that steers the whole man. What you say in a weak moment tells the truth about what you have been feeding in the quiet ones.
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Observation
- Psalm 15 asks who may dwell with God, then answers with two marks. What are they?
- In James 3:5-6, what images does James use for the tongue? Notice how small a thing does how much damage.
- Ephesians 4:29 draws a line between two kinds of speech. What is the test it gives for every word?
Interpretation
- Proverbs 10:9 says the man of integrity walks securely. Where does a hidden compromise have you walking carefully instead of freely?
- If your words this week were played back to the people you love, what would they learn about your heart?
- Where is the gap widest between the man others see and the man you know yourself to be? What is one honest step to close it?
One Application
Pick the one hidden thing you have been managing instead of confessing. This week, bring it into the light with one trusted man. Say it plainly, out loud, to someone who will stand with you. Integrity starts the moment the secret ends.
Prayer
Father, make the private man and the public man the same man. Guard my tongue, and guard the heart behind it. Give me the courage to be known, and the mercy that meets me when I am. Amen.
Week 5
Work and Perseverance
Chapters 13 to 15
Hughes refuses the split between sacred and secular. Your work, done well and unto God, is worship. But the point is not a fast start, it is finishing. Most men can begin. Fewer stay in it when the reward is far off and the middle is dull. Perseverance is the discipline that outlasts the feeling.
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Observation
- Colossians 3:23 tells us who we are actually working for. Who is it, and how does that change the standard?
- Galatians 6:9 gives a warning and a promise about doing good. What is the condition attached to the harvest?
- What does James 1:12 say is waiting for the man who stays under the trial rather than quitting it?
Interpretation
- If you worked this week as though the Lord were your employer, what is the first thing that would change?
- Where are you weary in doing good and tempted to coast? What would it look like to not give up there?
- 1 Corinthians 15:58 says your labor is not in vain. Where do you most need to believe that right now?
One Application
Name the one place you are ready to quit, at work, at home, in a discipline you started. This week, do the next faithful thing there anyway, without waiting to feel like it. Show up to the dull middle on purpose, and let the finishing be the win.
Prayer
Lord, let my work be worship and my endurance be worship too. When the reward is far off and the middle is long, keep me in it. Teach me to finish what I start for your name and not my applause. Amen.
Week 6
Church, Leadership, and Giving
Chapters 16 to 18 · Gather
The book closes where a man is meant to live, not alone but planted in a body, under God, giving himself away. Hughes says no man disciples himself in isolation. You need the church, you are called to lead where God has set you, and an open hand is the surest sign that money has not become your master. This is the gather week. Bring what you have read to the table with the brotherhood.
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Observation
- Hebrews 10:24-25 gives one thing not to do and two things to do together. What are they?
- In 1 Timothy 3, where does Paul say a man's leadership is first tested? Notice where the qualifications start.
- 2 Corinthians 9:7 describes the giver God loves. What is the posture of his heart?
Interpretation
- Where have you been trying to follow Christ at a distance from his people? What has that cost you?
- Leadership begins in the home. Which man under your roof or in your circle is God asking you to lead better?
- Looking back over six weeks, what is the one discipline you most want to carry into the next book? Say it out loud tonight.
One Application
Gather with your chapter this week and close the book together. Come with one thing that changed, one thing you are still fighting, and one commitment for the road ahead. Then give something away, time, money, or attention, to a man who needs it.
Prayer
Father, thank you for six weeks in this book and the men who walked it with me. Root me in your church, make me a leader worth following at home, and open my hands. Set my bearing for what is next. Amen.
Read it with the brotherhood.
The guide is good on its own. It is better around a table with a few men reading the same pages and asking the same questions.
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