Test Everything. Keep What Is Good.

⚡ Monday Inspiration for Electricians
“Test Everything. Keep What Is Good.” – 1 Thessalonians 5:21
Every electrician knows the value of a good test.
Whether you’re fault-finding a circuit, verifying continuity, or checking insulation resistance, one thing remains true:
👉 Testing reveals what is safe, what is faulty, and what needs to be removed.
But this principle isn’t only for wires, circuits, and systems.
It’s for life, work, faith, and character.
🔧 1. Testing Your Work — Testing Your Walk
When we test an installation, we don’t assume.
We measure. We check. We confirm.
In the same way:
- Test your attitudes
- Test your thoughts
- Test your choices
- Test your habits
Just like a faulty connection can heat up and cause damage, a wrong mindset can burn away your peace, joy, or purpose.
🌱 2. Only Keep What Is Good
Scripture tells us:
“Test everything; hold fast to what is good.”
— 1 Thessalonians 5:21
Not everything we encounter in life is meant to stay.
Some things, like overloaded circuits, must be taken out of the system.
In your daily work:
- You keep safe wiring
- You keep solid earth continuity
- You keep reliable readings
In your daily walk:
- Keep good company
- Keep good habits
- Keep good words
- Keep good thoughts
- Keep good standards
Let go of what drains you. Keep what strengthens you.
💡 3. Growth Comes Through Testing
You only know a system is strong after you’ve tested it.
And God often allows us to go through seasons of testing so we can grow stronger, wiser, and more grounded.
Just like we trust our instruments …
We need to trust His process.
⚙️ 4. Apply It to Today’s Work
As you step into this week:
- Test your work thoroughly
- Test your heart honestly
- Remove what’s not serving you
- Hold onto what is good, pure, and strengthening
When you test and keep what is good, you build electrical systems that last — and a life that shines.
⚡ Have a blessed and productive week, Electricians.
May your work be accurate, your spirit be steady, and your life stay connected to what is good.
Leave a comment