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FORGE TRIBE

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4 contributions to FORGE TRIBE
Days 15–21 of the Crucible, a few themes kept surfacing for me.
Genesis 3 brought me face to face with the way temptation actually works. The enemy rarely shows up with something obviously destructive. It usually begins with a quiet conversation in your own head. A small distortion. A suggestion that maybe you should decide for yourself what is good. Reflecting on that forced me to look honestly at some of the ways sin has crept into my own life over the years, especially around lust and the pursuit of things that promise power or escape but leave shame and emptiness behind. But even in that same story of the fall, there’s also the first promise. The curse enters the world, but God immediately speaks a promise of redemption. That pattern runs through the rest of Scripture. The passages about Abraham in Genesis 12 and 15 also stuck with me. God makes a promise, and Abram sets out without fully knowing how it will unfold. It made me think about what it actually means to trust God. I’m not sure any of us ever reach a point where we can say we’ve perfectly handed over all our fears, anxieties, and need for control. That seems more like a lifelong practice. But one thing Scripture shows again and again is that even if our faith wavers, God’s faithfulness does not. He makes promises, and He keeps them. The Tower of Babel also hit close to home. It’s easy to look at that story and think about ancient people building a tower, but it’s not that different from the ways we try to build our own security today. Careers, status, wealth, control over our circumstances. None of those things are bad in themselves, but they can quietly become the towers we rely on instead of God. One thing I’m noticing through this section of the Crucible is how often Scripture holds these tensions together: human failure and divine faithfulness. The curse and the promise. Our tendency to grasp for control and God’s invitation to trust Him. Curious what has been standing out to the rest of you going through Days 15–21.
2 likes • Mar 17
@Sean Baker I heard once... Am I doing this for God or am I doing this for myself in God's name? One reflects alignment with His will and the other seeks validation for our own efforts.
1 like • Mar 20
A lot of great life principles rest on this simple yet very powerful understanding. You cannot out exercise poor eating habits, you cannot out earn poor spending habits, you cannot out serve, outgive or outperform your sin. Eating and spending deal with behavior modification. Sin deals with life transformation which isn't about your performance. It's about Christs accomplished work. The Spirit at work in you aligns uphill habits with uphill intent (Maxwell) leading to incredible Spiritual momentum. The wisdom for that alignment doesn't reside in us. It's inspired in us through the work of the Spirit.
Drive out the Snakes!
At age 16, he was kidnapped from his Roman-British home by Irish marauders/pirates who raided his home, kidnapping him along with many others. He was sold into slavery in northern Ireland, and forced to work as a shepherd for a local king. He endured harsh conditions, including isolation, starvation, and extreme weather, which led him to turn to prayer, often saying "as many as a hundred prayers" a day. After six years, he heard a voice in a dream telling him a ship was waiting to take him home, prompting him to travel roughly 200 miles to a port to escape. He eventually returned to Britain but later felt a calling in a dream to return to Ireland as a missionary, converting his former captors to Christianity. His Name: Maewyn Succat or as we know him Saint Patrick! As I arise today, may the strength of God pilot me, the power of God uphold me, the wisdom of God guide me. May the eye of God look before me, the ear of God hear me, the word of God speak for me. May the hand of God protect me, the way of God lie before me, the shield of God defend me, the host of God save me. May Christ shield me today. Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me, Christ on my right, Christ on my left, Christ when I lie down, Christ when I sit, Christ when I stand, Christ in the heart of everyone who thinks of me, Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me, Christ in every eye that sees me, Christ in every ear that hears me. Amen
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Why The Crucible Is 40 Days
When we designed The Crucible inside Forge Tribe, the length was not arbitrary. It comes from a pattern that appears again and again throughout Scripture. In the Bible, 40 days is a period God often uses to test, purify, prepare, and commission His people for what comes next. Before major turning points in God’s story, there is often a 40-day season of pressure, surrender, and transformation. Here are some of the most significant examples: The Flood — Genesis 7:12 Rain fell for 40 days and 40 nights, cleansing the earth before a new beginning with Noah. Noah Waits — Genesis 8:6 After the flood, Noah waited 40 days before opening the ark to see what God had done. Moses on Mount Sinai — Exodus 24:18; 34:28 Moses spent 40 days and 40 nights with God receiving the Law and later interceding for Israel. The Spies in Canaan — Numbers 13:25 Israel explored the Promised Land for 40 days before the nation faced a decision of faith. Goliath’s Challenge — 1 Samuel 17:16 For 40 days, Israel faced the taunts of Goliath before David stepped forward in faith. Elijah’s Journey — 1 Kings 19:8 Elijah traveled 40 days and 40 nights to Mount Horeb, where God renewed his calling. Nineveh’s Warning — Jonah 3:4 Nineveh was given 40 days to repent before judgment. Jesus in the Wilderness — Matthew 4:1–2 Jesus fasted 40 days and 40 nights in the wilderness before beginning His public ministry. After the Resurrection — Acts 1:3 Jesus spent 40 days teaching His disciples before sending them out to change the world. Across Scripture, the pattern is consistent: 40 days is a season of testing before mission. A season of purification before calling. A season of surrender before leadership. It is the length of time God often uses to reshape hearts before He sends men forward. That is why The Crucible is 40 days. Not as a challenge for the sake of hardship. But as a biblically grounded season of refinement. A time for men to strip away distraction, confront their idols, deepen their dependence on Christ, and emerge ready to live with greater clarity, conviction, and brotherhood.
9 likes • Mar 4
I like it! It challenges me because we often want the calling without the crushing, the commissioning without the consecration, yet Scripture shows the forty always comes first. What moves me most is the reminder that the fire isn’t about proving strength but surrendering to transformation — not completing a challenge, but becoming a different kind of man on the other side.
Day 1 Check-In: Post Your Video
Day 1. Before the week gets busy and life starts pulling at you, take a minute to post a short video to the community wall. Nothing polished. Just honest. Share: - How you’re feeling starting today - Why you decided to do this - What you’re hoping changes over the next 90 days It doesn’t need to be long: 60–90 seconds is plenty. There’s something powerful about saying it out loud. It makes it real. It also helps the rest of us know who we’re walking alongside. If you’re a little uncomfortable posting, that’s probably a good sign. Lean into it. Go ahead and record it now.
Day 1 Check-In: Post Your Video
1 like • Feb 24
@Tommy Adler “mandatory fun” workout and then the normal workouts I do Monday. Does that count for my 3 for the week? 🤣
0 likes • Feb 24
“Mandatory fun” was a military must attend workout in addition to my personal 2 a days :).
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Calebb Proehl
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32points to level up
@calebb-proehl-4548
Christ follower, Family man, Outdoors Guy, Ultra runner

Active 37d ago
Joined Feb 23, 2026
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