My home is in Heaven. I'm just traveling through this world. — Billy Graham

My home is in Heaven. I'm just traveling through this world.

Author: Billy Graham

Insight: There's a particular kind of peace that comes from believing you're not supposed to stay. When you're traveling through a place, you stop sweating the small stuff—the scratches on the rental car, the mediocre hotel room, whether you fit in perfectly with the locals. You're already mentally halfway somewhere else, which paradoxically makes you lighter while you're here. This mindset cuts against how we usually operate. We treat this world like a permanent address we need to furnish, perfect, and defend. We accumulate, worry, and cling because we assume this is all there is. But the traveling metaphor suggests something radical: what if your real investment isn't in decorating the temporary place but in preparing for the actual destination? Not in a grim, life-denying way, but as a clarifying tool. It reorders your priorities without paralyzing you. The strange part? People who genuinely hold this belief often seem more engaged with the world, not less. They volunteer, they love generously, they take ethical risks. When you're not desperate to make this place prove your worth or safety, you're free to actually help while passing through. The lighter luggage matters more than the fanciest hotel.

The freedom of passing through

My home is in Heaven. I'm just traveling through this world.

There's a particular kind of peace that comes from believing you're not supposed to stay. When you're traveling through a place, you stop sweating the small stuff—the scratches on the rental car, the mediocre hotel room, whether you fit in perfectly with the locals. You're already mentally halfway somewhere else, which paradoxically makes you lighter while you're here.

This mindset cuts against how we usually operate. We treat this world like a permanent address we need to furnish, perfect, and defend. We accumulate, worry, and cling because we assume this is all there is. But the traveling metaphor suggests something radical: what if your real investment isn't in decorating the temporary place but in preparing for the actual destination? Not in a grim, life-denying way, but as a clarifying tool. It reorders your priorities without paralyzing you.

The strange part? People who genuinely hold this belief often seem more engaged with the world, not less. They volunteer, they love generously, they take ethical risks. When you're not desperate to make this place prove your worth or safety, you're free to actually help while passing through. The lighter luggage matters more than the fanciest hotel.

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Billy Graham

Billy Graham (1918–2018) was an influential American evangelist and preacher known for his charismatic sermons and large-scale evangelical crusades. He served as a spiritual advisor to several U.S. presidents and played a significant role in shaping modern American Christianity through his ministry, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

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