The Divine Curriculum: 8 Steps to Multiplying Your Faith

The Divine Curriculum

Let’s get real for a moment.

You don’t wake up one day with unshakable faith. It doesn’t just drop on you fully formed. Faith grows. It develops. It gets tested, stretched, refined.

And when you read Scripture carefully, you start to notice something. God doesn’t grow your faith randomly. There’s a pattern. A kind of training process. Almost like a curriculum.

Not man-made. God-designed.

Peter actually lays it out step by step.

“And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge;
And to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness;
And to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity.”
(2 Peter 1:5–7, KJV)

That’s not just a list. That’s a progression.

So let’s walk through it. Slowly. Honestly. Because this is where faith stops being theory and starts becoming something that actually shapes your life.


Step 1: Faith, The Starting Point

Everything begins here.

“For by grace are ye saved through faith…” (Ephesians 2:8, KJV)

Faith is the entry point. It’s how you come to God. It’s how you trust Him before you see anything change.

But here’s the truth. Starting in faith is not the same as growing in faith.

You can believe in God and still feel stuck.

That’s why Peter says, “add to your faith.”

In other words, don’t stay at the starting line.


Step 2: Virtue, Choosing What Is Right

Virtue is about moral strength. Choosing what is right, even when it’s inconvenient.

This is where faith starts showing up in your decisions.

Because it’s easy to say you trust God. It’s harder to live like it when temptation shows up.

“Be ye holy; for I am holy.” (1 Peter 1:16, KJV)

Virtue is not about perfection. It’s about direction.

Every time you choose obedience over compromise, your faith grows roots.


Step 3: Knowledge, Knowing God’s Ways

Now you start learning.

Not just facts. Not just verses to quote. Real understanding.

“Through knowledge shall the just be delivered.” (Proverbs 11:9, KJV)

This is where time in the Word matters.

Because you can’t trust someone deeply if you barely know them.

The apostles didn’t operate on shallow knowledge. They knew the Scriptures. They understood God’s ways. That gave their faith stability.


Step 4: Temperance, Self-Control When It’s Hard

This is where things get real.

Temperance means self-control. Restraint. Discipline.

“And every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all things.” (1 Corinthians 9:25, KJV)

You ever feel like your emotions, habits, or impulses just take over?

Yeah, that’s where this step hits.

Faith grows when you stop being led by every feeling and start being led by truth.

Not easy. But necessary.


Step 5: Patience, Staying Steady Under Pressure

Patience is not passive.

It’s strength under pressure.

“Let patience have her perfect work…” (James 1:4, KJV)

This is where many people give up.

Because this step takes time.

You pray. You believe. And then… nothing seems to change right away.

But something is changing.

You.

Patience stretches your faith so it doesn’t collapse the moment things get difficult.


Step 6: Godliness, Reflecting God’s Character

Now faith starts shaping who you are.

Godliness is not about acting religious. It’s about becoming like Him.

“Exercise thyself rather unto godliness.” (1 Timothy 4:7, KJV)

This is internal.

Your thoughts. Your reactions. Your motives.

You start caring about what God cares about.

And when that happens, your faith is no longer just something you use. It becomes part of who you are.


Step 7: Brotherly Kindness, Loving People Practically

Here’s where faith moves outward.

“Be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love…” (Romans 12:10, KJV)

It’s easy to talk about loving people. It’s harder to live it when people are difficult.

But this step matters.

Because faith that doesn’t touch how you treat others is incomplete.

The early church didn’t just preach. They cared for each other. Shared. Served. Supported.

That kind of faith multiplies.


Step 8: Charity, The Full Expression of Faith

This is the final step. Love in its fullest form.

“And now abideth faith, hope, charity… but the greatest of these is charity.” (1 Corinthians 13:13, KJV)

Charity is not surface-level kindness. It’s sacrificial love.

This is where faith reaches maturity.

Because real faith always leads to love.

Not forced. Not fake. Genuine.

And when faith reaches this point, it doesn’t just grow. It multiplies.


How Pentecost Connects to This Growth

Now here’s something powerful.

All of this becomes possible because of Pentecost.

“And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost…” (Acts 2:4, KJV)

Before that moment, the disciples had faith. But it was inconsistent. Fear showed up often.

After Pentecost, everything shifted.

They didn’t just believe. They were empowered.

Boldness replaced fear. Clarity replaced confusion. Strength replaced weakness.

The Holy Spirit didn’t remove the process. He empowered it.

Every step we just walked through is strengthened by Him.

“Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh.” (Galatians 5:16, KJV)

You’re not meant to complete this curriculum on your own.


What Happens When You Follow This Path

Peter doesn’t just list these steps and leave it there. He tells you the result.

“For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful…” (2 Peter 1:8, KJV)

That’s the goal.

Not empty faith. Not stagnant faith.

Fruitful faith.

Faith that produces something real in your life.


Bringing It Into Your Life

So where do you start?

Not by trying to master all eight steps at once.

Start with honesty.

Where are you right now?

Maybe your faith is there, but virtue needs work.
Maybe you know a lot, but patience is thin.
Maybe you’re strong in discipline, but love is struggling.

That’s okay.

Growth is a process.

Stay in the Word.
Stay sensitive to the Spirit.
Respond when God nudges you.

Step by step.


Final Thought

This divine curriculum is not about pressure. It’s about progression.

God is not expecting instant perfection. He’s inviting consistent growth.

And through the Holy Spirit, the same power that came at Pentecost is working in you.

So don’t settle for seed-level faith.

Keep moving forward.

Because when faith is built God’s way, step by step, it doesn’t just grow.

It multiplies.




Call to Action: The Question That Demands an Answer

In Acts 2:37 Peter and the Apostles were asked the question – What Shall We do?

And in Acts 2:38 Peter answered, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call.

Do you understand this? After hearing the gospel and believing, they asked what should would do. The answer hasn’t changed friend, Peter clearly gave the answer. The question for you today is, Have you receieved the Holy Spirit Since you believed?

If you’re ready to take that step, or you want to learn more about what it means to be born again of water and Spirit, visit:
👉 revivalnsw.com.au

Come, and let the Spirit make you new.