Arnold Cox

203 posts

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Arnold Cox

Arnold Cox

@acox317

Bay Minette, AL Katılım Mart 2013
248 Takip Edilen109 Takipçiler
Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
All glory to God! My book is coming along great and even have an agent interested in getting me a big time contract with a major publishing company once I continue building my platform that I just began a month ago! Delay doesn’t mean denial!! Daniel 11:32b. “They that know their God shall be strong and do great exploits!” Connect with me at drcoxcultivatesleaders.com @highlight
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Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
Having received great responses I am extending the blog series: Trust the Process: A Leadership & Faith Series (Part 2) Here is Blog number 5 that aligns with the chapters in my soon to be released book. Trust the Process: When God Writes the Curriculum for Your Life! Enjoy! Blog 5: Remedial Seasons Are Not Failures Some seasons repeat themselves—not because we failed, but because the lesson wasn’t fully formed yet. In education, remediation is not punishment; it is support. It exists to ensure mastery, not to shame the learner. In life, God often uses repeated experiences to deepen understanding and strengthen obedience. I’ve learned that when God allows us to revisit familiar challenges, it’s rarely about going backward. More often, it’s about preparing us to move forward without weakness. Each return to the lesson offers a chance to respond differently—to choose faith over frustration, humility over pride, and obedience over resistance. If you find yourself facing a familiar test, pause before labeling it as failure. It may be evidence that God is committed to your growth and unwilling to promote you without preparation. Reflection Question: What lesson do you believe God may be revisiting in your life right now?
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Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
Trust the Process: A Leadership & Faith Series Life has a way of teaching lessons without asking for permission. Some seasons feel carefully planned, while others arrive unannounced—bringing pressure, uncertainty, and growth we didn’t expect. Yet in every stage, God is writing a curriculum designed not just to shape our outcomes, but to form our character. This series, Trust the Process, explores what it means to grow through life’s unchosen lessons, unexpected tests, and quiet seasons of preparation. Drawing from faith, leadership, and lived experience, each reflection invites readers to pause, examine their current season, and recognize how God is working even when the lesson feels unclear. If you find yourself navigating change, challenge, or calling, consider this an invitation to stay enrolled. The process may be uncomfortable—but it is purposeful. Passing the Test Without Knowing the Grade One of the hardest parts of trusting the process is not knowing how you’re doing. In school, we expect feedback—grades, evaluations, confirmation that our effort is paying off. But God doesn’t always operate on our preferred assessment schedule. Sometimes obedience is required without affirmation. Faithfulness is tested without applause. I’ve learned that success in God’s curriculum is not measured by immediate results, but by consistent obedience. Showing up when it’s hard. Choosing integrity when it costs something. Remaining faithful when progress feels invisible. You may never know in the moment how well you handled a season. But over time, the fruit reveals the grade. Trust that God sees your effort. Trust that nothing is wasted. Trust that the lesson is working in you, even when you can’t see the results yet. Reflection Question: What does obedience look like for you right now, even without immediate confirmation? Black Leaders Worldwide™ Council for Leaders in Alabama Schools Bailey Education Group, LLC Baldwin County Public Schools
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Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
Attending mentor/mentee sessions with CLAS/APLDS in Mobile at The University of South Alabama College of Education Council for Leaders in Alabama Schools Bailey Education Group, LLC Black Leaders Worldwide™
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Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
When Pressure Becomes the Teacher Trust the Process: A Leadership & Faith Series Life has a way of teaching lessons without asking for permission. Some seasons feel carefully planned, while others arrive unannounced—bringing pressure, uncertainty, and growth we didn’t expect. Yet in every stage, God is writing a curriculum designed not just to shape our outcomes, but to form our character. This series, Trust the Process, explores what it means to grow through life’s unchosen lessons, unexpected tests, and quiet seasons of preparation. Drawing from faith, leadership, and lived experience, each reflection invites readers to pause, examine their current season, and recognize how God is working even when the lesson feels unclear. If you find yourself navigating change, challenge, or calling, consider this an invitation to stay enrolled. The process may be uncomfortable—but it is purposeful. Blog #3 Pressure has a way of revealing what preparation hides. In leadership and in life, we often feel confident until we are tested. Pop quizzes show up without warning—moments that demand courage, wisdom, and faith beyond what we feel ready to give. These experiences can either expose our gaps or deepen our growth. God uses pressure as a teacher, not to embarrass us, but to mature us. Under pressure, we learn how to respond instead of react. We discover whether our faith is rooted in comfort or conviction. We learn how to lead when answers aren’t clear. I’ve come to understand that pressure doesn’t mean I’ve failed the course. It often means I’m advancing. The lesson has simply moved from theory to application. If you’re under pressure right now, pause before labeling it as punishment. It may be confirmation that God trusts you with more. Reflection Question: How do you typically respond when pressure reveals areas where you still need growth?
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Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
This is blog number 2 in a series that aligns with my new soon to be released book, Trust the Process: When God Writes the Curriculum for Your Life. You can also visit my website at drcoxcultivatesleaders.com for the initial blog and much more The Syllabus You Didn’t Choose Most of us enter life with a plan—or at least a preference. We imagine the path will make sense, that the lessons will be logical, and that our effort will be rewarded on a predictable timeline. But God rarely asks us to approve the syllabus before class begins. Some of the most important lessons we learn come from experiences we never would have selected for ourselves. Loss. Delay. Closed doors. Unexpected responsibility. These moments feel disruptive, yet they often contain the deepest instruction. I’ve learned that when God allows us into seasons we didn’t choose, He is often teaching us something we couldn’t learn any other way. Patience cannot be rushed. Humility cannot be downloaded. Faith cannot be simulated. When the syllabus doesn’t match your expectations, resist the urge to withdraw from the course. Stay engaged. Ask the right questions. Remain obedient. The lesson may be preparing you for a future assignment you can’t yet see. Reflection Question: What season in your life feels unplanned—and what might God be teaching you through it?
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Arnold Cox
Arnold Cox@acox317·
Boi on fire 7v7 tournament with Elite Prodigy #12 6’3” 185 WR 2026🔥🏈 Great concentration at catch👏🏻 They had to double him @DanLaForestFB
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