Role Models: How to Know Who Is Shaping Your Faith

Role Models: How to Know Who Is Shaping Your Faith

Nobody wakes up one morning and decides, “I am going to let this person reshape how I think about God.” It happens slowly. A voice you keep returning to. A life that makes you want something different. Before you notice it, you have been shaped.

That is how role modeling works. Quietly, consistently, over time.

Paul understood this better than most. He wrote to the Corinthians: “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Corinthians 11:1). That sentence should make us stop. Paul was not being arrogant. He was being honest about something we tend to avoid: every one of us is being formed by someone. The only question is whether we are paying attention to who that someone is.

What the Right Role Model Definition Means for a Believer

When the world talks about role models, it usually points to achievement. The athlete who broke records. The leader who built something impressive. Achievement is real, but the role model definition that matters for a follower of Christ goes deeper than what a person has accomplished.

A biblical role model is someone whose character, not just their career, is worth imitating. Someone whose private life holds up. Someone who fails and responds with repentance rather than denial. Hebrews 13:7 says it plainly: “Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith.” Not their platform. Not their influence. Their way of life. That is a high standard. It is also a clarifying one.

The Voices You Keep Returning To Are Already Shaping You

Here is a practical question worth sitting with this week: whose voice do you seek out when life gets hard? When your faith feels dry, when you have a decision that genuinely scares you — who do you turn to? That person, whether you have named them or not, is functioning as a role model in your life.

Now ask the harder question. Is that person worth following?

I have watched believers absorb theology from podcasters they have never met, borrow their ethics from people whose private lives they know nothing about, and build their picture of Christian faith around social media personas built for an audience. The influence flows in one direction, and the person receiving it rarely examines it.

Role modeling at its best is not passive consumption. It is an intentional observation of a whole life. Paul did not just tell people to listen to his sermons. He told them to watch him. Watch how he handled suffering. Watch what he did when he had nothing. You cannot watch a highlight reel and call it discipleship.

Choose Your Models Before Life Chooses Them for You

Find people in your actual community — not just online — whose marriages you respect, whose prayer lives are real, whose generosity costs them something. Study the lives of men and women in Scripture who trusted God under pressure: Joseph, Ruth, Daniel, and Mary of Bethany. These are not just Bible characters. They are models of faith that holds when holding is hard.

And be honest about the models you have already accepted. Some of them need to be released. Not with bitterness. With clarity. Proverbs 13:20 is direct: “Walk with the wise and become wise, for a companion of fools suffers harm.” The voices you trust are not neutral. Neither is the content you consume, nor the lives you study.

Your faith is being formed right now by someone. Examine what you are already following. Then choose more carefully.

If this stirred something in you, head over to The Mentoring Project’s free Life Skill Guides page — over 100 biblical guides available in audio and PDF formats.

It picks up exactly where this article leaves off and will help you get honest about the influences already at work in your faith. It is free, practical, and worth every minute.

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