Section 1: The Limp as Witness
Think about an area of your life where you’ve been walking “differently”—not just physically, but emotionally, relationally, or spiritually.
In what ways have I adjusted my pace or posture without fully realizing it?
What would it look like to name that limp not as weakness, but as witness?
What parts of my story carry a limp?
Are there scars people can see?
Or are they quiet, internal weights?
How might those wounds be shaping who I’m becoming?
Section 2: The Scars That Stay
Some scars fade and some don’t—but they all speak.
What moment in my life left a scar I’ve never really named?
What would it mean to see that scar as a sign of healing, not damage?
So maybe the real question isn’t: Do I have scars? Maybe it’s: What story are they telling now?
What scars—physical or otherwise—have I been hiding or minimizing?
What would change if I let them speak, not of what broke me, but of what healed me?
Can I name one of my giants—not to glorify the pain, but to give my healing a voice?
Section 3: When Hiding Becomes Habit
It’s possible to build success around suppressed pain.
Where in my leadership or relationships have I been “managing” instead of healing?
What silent rule have I been obeying that keeps me from telling the truth?
Section 4: Reclaiming the Real Name
We often inherit false names—driven by fear, performance, or pain.
What names have I quietly carried that were never mine to begin with?
What truth needs to be spoken back to those labels?
Section 5: Legacy as Endurance, Not Perfection
Legacy doesn’t come from never falling.
It comes from limping forward anyway.
Who in my life has modeled legacy not through success, but through faithfulness?
What part of my own story might become a mirror for someone else’s courage?
You don’t have to walk flawlessly to walk in purpose.
You just have to walk faithfully—limp and all.
The same thread of redemption that ran through Jacob, Joseph, David, and Moody now runs through you.
Your pain is not the end of your story.
It’s the beginning of your legacy.