I’ve asked this question before: Does the gospel belong in the YouTube golf space?
Some would say no. Some would say faith and content should stay separate. But if Christ is part of my everyday life, why would I separate Him from something I do every day or why would YOU seperate Him from it? Yes, I understand my channel is a outlier channel but let spit real quick.

Lately, I’ve been realizing there are actually hundreds of believers in the golf space. More and more are finding boldness to speak about Him — and that’s amazing. Keep going. Keep boasting in Him.

At the same time, I’ve had to reflect on myself and my brand. I’ve come to a realization: maybe it’s not that I talk about Jesus in the YouTube golf space… maybe it’s the quantity in which I do it.

Because of how often I speak about the gospel, I know some might see me as “overly religious” or even legalistic. So let me say this clearly:

I absolutely love Jesus.
But I’m not culturally illiterated. I know how to sit at a restaurant with the guys, watch a game, vibe, and joke around. I can enjoy a Kendrick or J. Cole concert and still honor the Lord while doing it.

More importantly, I want to start with this truth: like Paul said, I’m the foremost of sinners. I’m not speaking from a pedestal — I’m speaking from grace. I desperately want people to experience the love of Jesus, the peace of Jesus, and the joy of Jesus. And I also understand the ramifications of not knowing Him. I don’t want my neighbor to experience those ramifications.

And truthfully, I don’t believe Jesus should only be talked about on Easter or Christmas. Those moments are beautiful reminders — but He’s not seasonal. He’s daily. He’s constant. So if He’s truly Lord of my life, it only makes sense that He would be part of my everyday conversations, my content, and yes, even my golf rounds.

That’s why I can’t stop boasting in the Lord — even while I’m out there shooting bogeys, maybe a couple pars, and an occasional birdie.

A good friend who once discipled me, KB (Kevin Burgess), told me something that stuck:

“Your day is usually split into thirds: eight hours sleeping, eight hours at home, and eight hours at work. That means most of your ministry has to happen in your workplace.”

For me, the golf course and the content space is part of that workplace. So I’m going to keep proclaiming Christ there.

I’ll leave you with this:

Psalm 96:2 — “Sing to the Lord… proclaim his salvation day after day.”

And that’s the goal — not just occasionally, not just when it’s convenient, but day after day.