“Teach me Your way, O Lord; I will walk in Your truth; unite my heart to fear Your name” (Psalm 86:11).
To be a disciple is to be a student or learner. It is more than simply believing in God. It is choosing, day after day, to be taught by Him. The psalmist captures this desire beautifully with a simple prayer: “Teach me Your way.”
This is where true discipleship begins. Many of us desire guidance from God, especially in difficult moments. But discipleship is not limited to those times. It is a daily posture of humility, a willingness to sit before God and say, “I still have more to learn.” It is recognizing that His ways are higher than ours and that walking in His truth requires ongoing growth.
In the language of Scripture, a disciple is a student. Jesus did not call His followers to simply admire Him, but to learn from Him. When He sent them out to make disciples, He was calling them to help others become learners as well. A disciple produces other disciples by first being one.
The example of Ezra gives us a clear picture of what this looks like. He set his heart to study God’s Word, to live it out, and then to teach it to others. This pattern remains essential. Learning is not complete until it shapes how we live. And living what we learn becomes the foundation for helping others grow.
But the psalmist adds something deeper: “Unite my heart to fear Your name.” This reveals that learning from God is not merely intellectual. It is deeply personal and emotional. A divided heart cannot fully follow Him. When our desires are pulled in different directions, obedience becomes difficult. We may know what is right, but struggle to live it out.
That is why the psalmist prays for a united heart. To truly learn God’s way, our hearts must be aligned with Him. We must desire His truth above our own preferences. We must seek Him with sincerity, allowing His Word to shape not only our thoughts, but our actions and attitudes.
This kind of discipleship is not casual. It is intentional. It means opening His Word regularly. It means listening for His voice. It means choosing obedience even when it is uncomfortable. And it means sharing what we are learning with others, not as experts, but as fellow students on the journey.
So, the question is worth asking: what kind of disciple are you? Are you still learning? Are you allowing God to teach you daily? Is your heart fully aligned with Him, or divided by competing desires?
God invites each of us into a deeper walk with Him. A life where we continue to grow, to obey, and to help others do the same. A disciple is not someone who has arrived. It is someone who keeps following.
PRAYER
Father, teach us Your way each day. Help us walk in Your truth with an undivided heart. Shape our lives through Your Word, and use us to help others grow as faithful disciples. Amen.




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