Why Travel Is Important for the Christian Life: Gaining Perspective, Wisdom, and Relatability
Growing up, we moved constantly. It felt like we never stayed in one house for more than a few years. Some saw it as instability; others thought it was an adventurous life. Either way, it shaped me. It prepared me for the life God would later call my own family to live.
My childhood gave me more than just a willingness to moveโit gave me a love for new places, a thrill for culture shocks, and a joy for the unfamiliar. Over the years, Iโve traveled across the U.S., visited Africa, and explored parts of Mexico. And one thing Iโve come to believe with my whole heart: Christians should travel more.
Travel has taught me wisdom, grown my ability to relate to others, and expanded my perspective. Hereโs why I believe travel is essential for the Christian life.

Broadening your perspective
When you step outside your daily environmentโyour hometown, your culture, your routinesโyou begin to see how vast Godโs world really is and how much beauty lies within it. Travel expands your perspective, helping you see life through different lenses.
In America, many assume that a mother staying home to raise her children is the norm (and maybe it is in America!). But in parts of Africa, Iโve seen women sitting on the side of the road selling produce with their babies beside them, not because they chose to work outside the home, but because they had to in order to survive. That experience shifted my thinking. I realized that staying home with our children in America is often a privilege, not a right. And itโs not that God calls every woman to stay home; itโs just something many of us have the luxury to choose.
When we travel, we witness how people live differently, struggle differently, and worship differently. Moving around has forced me to let go of assumptions, biases, and the narrow belief that thereโs only one โrightโ way to live a faithful life.
I believe there are many paths a person can take in life. The point isnโt to all walk the same one, but to walk with wisdom, humility, and an openness to where God may lead. Travel has reminded me again and again that God’s work is not confined to one place, one culture, or one way of doing things. Itโs through stepping outside our own world that we often see Him more clearly.

Travel Makes You More Relatable
The ability to relate to others is essential for evangelism, discipleship, and simply being a good neighbor. Paul said, โI have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.โ (1 Corinthians 9:22)
When weโve seen more of the worldโor even just different parts of our own countryโweโre better equipped to connect with people from various backgrounds, cultures, and experiences. Exposure expands empathy. You begin to understand different perspectives, whether itโs something as lighthearted as comparing humidity to dry heat or something more serious, like the emotional toll and isolation that long, harsh winters can bring in places like Connecticut.
I canโt count how many conversations Iโve had with complete strangers, sparked by something as simple as the weather. When you have stories, shared experiences, and cultural context, you become more approachable and less judgmental. And at the heart of it, connection is a reflection of Godโs heart. Traveling allows me to witness both sufferings and blessings firsthand, and it fuels my desire to reach people, relate to them, and love them well, so that by any means, some might be saved.

Travel Teaches Wisdom
Travel requires flexibility, patience, and discernment. If youโve ever been on the road, you know that nothing ever goes exactly as planned. The more you travel, the more wisdom you gain for the next time around.
Weโve moved 20 times in 13 years, and with each move, Iโve grown wiserโlearning what truly matters, what I need to let go of, and how to find contentment by trusting God through every transition.
Gaining perspective leads to wisdom, which helps us better understand God’s plan for our lives. We often learn important lessons about ourselves, others, and God not in comfort, but in unfamiliar situations.
Travel Deepens Your Dependence on God
Being in unfamiliar places makes you acutely aware of your need for God. You pray more, asking for protection, patience, and direction, because suddenly, you’re not in control.
Weโve missed flights, gotten lost, and found ourselves in places where we didnโt speak the language. Itโs unsettling when someone pulls you over and tells you to follow them, and you have no idea where youโre being taken. In those moments, your spiritual sensitivity sharpens. You begin to think more deeply about Godโs protection over your life and His presence in every unknown.
Iโll never forget when we first landed in Africa. We were stranded at the airport for hours, unsure of what to do. The guards refused to let us through unless we gave them money. Just as my husband was about to hand it over, the U.S. Embassy showed up and intervened. Down to the last second, we were praying that God would come throug, and He did.
Every new place you go, every move you make, becomes a new opportunity to surrender and trust that God is already there, going before you.

Travel Fuels Growth and Maturity
Ultimately, travel is a powerful way to grow and mature in your walk with Jesus. Whether you’re traveling for work, vacation, or mission, youโre stripped of comfort, routine, and predictability. Youโre invited into patience as you navigate airports. Youโre learning trust every time you get in the car for a cross-country drive. Youโre practicing surrender every time you say โyesโ to God and move, again.
Growth doesnโt happen in the safe zone. It happens when your faith is stretched, your heart expanded, and your eyes opened to all that God is doing in and through His people around the world. Whether it’s a family vacation, a couples’ cruise, or overseas mission work: every trip can become an intentional act of spiritual formation when you approach it with the mindset of transformation.

So go. See the big, beautiful world God created.
Life is a gift from God, and He shapes us through every experience we walk through. For the Christian, there is no separation between โlifeโ and โspiritual life.โ Whether you travel for pleasure or for purpose, it all becomes an opportunity for spiritual growth and deeper intimacy with Christ.
Traveling isnโt a distraction from lifeโitโs part of it. As we walk the streets of other cultures and learn their customs, we grow in compassion and grace. We weren’t meant to spend our lives confined to the four walls of our homes. We live in a time when travel is more accessible than ever, and we should steward that opportunity well.
So go. See the big, beautiful world God created. Ask Him to meet you wherever you go, and be transformed.
Whereโs one place youโve traveled that shaped your faith or changed your perspective? Share it in the comments below!

