Trust & Obey

And Isaac said to his father Abraham, “My father!” And he said, “Here I am, my son.” He said, “Behold, the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?” Abraham said, “God will provide for himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son.” So they went both of them together.“

‭‭Genesis‬ ‭22‬:‭7‬-‭8‬ 

And Abraham lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold, behind him was a ram, caught in a thicket by his horns. And Abraham went and took the ram and offered it up as a burnt offering instead of his son. So Abraham called the name of that place, “The Lord will provide”; as it is said to this day, “On the mount of the Lord it shall be provided.”

‭‭Genesis‬ ‭22‬:‭13‬-‭14‬ 

Recently, I’ve been looking at the life of Abraham, and I’ve come to stories I’ve read and heard many times in my life. Abraham has always been one of my favorite characters, and while I know this story is prophetic of Jesus, as I read it this time, God spoke to me about provision.

As Isaac and Abraham headed toward the sacrificial offering, Isaac asked where the lamb was. Abraham responded that God would provide for Himself the lamb. Then, as Abraham lifted the knife to slay his son, God called out to Abraham to stop. When Abraham looked, there was the ram that would be the sacrifice. Abraham was fully obedient in following God’s directions, and, at what we would see as at the last minute, God fully provided.

There are situations right now that I’m facing in which I just don’t see the how of it being worked out. Yet, God reminded me that it’s not my place to worry. It’s my place to trust and obey. In trusting and obeying, God will provide, sometimes at the last minute. 

As you go into this new year, are you wondering how you’re going to pay that bill? Trusting and obeying means “the Lord will provide”. Are you wondering how that work situation is going to be resolved? Trusting and obeying means “the Lord will provide”. Are you wondering how the needs of your family are going to be met? Trusting and obeying means “the Lord will provide”. Are you wondering how that relationship with a loved one will be restored? Trusting and obeying means “the Lord will provide”. We may struggle with the timeline, but no matter what the situation, trusting and obeying means “the Lord will provide” in His perfect time. 

Trust and obey no matter what. His timing is perfect. His provision is perfect.

“The Lord will provide.”

Filled up

There are a few times a year I feel absolutely burnt out. I realize at these times my cup is near empty and I am spiritually dehydrated. When life gets busy, it’s so easy to rush my quiet time or skip it altogether. That daily time with Jesus is so worth it, you don’t want to miss it. 

Make it a priority to read your Bible on a daily basis. The nourishment of God’s word does not compare to any worldly thing out there. If you are a believer, inspect your walk with the Lord. Choose someone in your life to share the gospel with and pray fervently for them. 

If I can be filled up with the love and strength of Jesus, then I don’t want it any other way. Let’s start the new year with cups that are overflowing thanks to the Lord’s goodness!

“You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.”

Psalm 23:5-6

Resolution became reality

To anyone who made getting up early and getting in the Word your New Year’s resolution:

Yes.

Yes, you can.

My whole life I was a “sleeper-inner”. Like a professional. You can ask my dad. However, in 2017 I set a goal to get up before everyone else and spend time with my bestie – God.

And I did.

Was it easy?

No.

Did I do it?

Yes.

And all these years later I’m still setting that alarm and getting up.

With God, lots of prayer, and lots of determination – the resolution became a reality.

God split the Red Sea, y’all. He can make you a morning person. Psssshhhhh.

Let me tell you something, I’m going on year 7 of this and I’m a literal Ray of Sunshine in the mornings now. I mean, after a cup of coffee of course.

I love it. I love the quiet. I love the sweet whispers between God and myself. I love the stillness. I love that it’s “ours”.

The only day I don’t set my alarm is on Saturday – if the kiddos don’t have some type of something that is.

Summer break, Christmas break, winter break, it doesn’t matter – the alarm is being set. And I’m getting up, and I’m getting set.

Set up for excellence. Because that’s what being in God’s word does.

Y’all, just trust me. It’s the sweetest, best time of the day.

If I can, you can.

Because God can.

7 For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline. 2 Timothy 1:7

New year, old me.

When I share my testimony with people, I usually begin by stating that I accepted Christ when I was 12 years old, but I didn’t start acting like it until I was 27. To say that I was hot mess as a teenager would be the understatement of the century. I was grounded more than I was free. I snuck out, stole money from my dad while he was sleeping, started drinking and smoking before I even graced the doors of my high school campus. I bounced more checks in my late teens and early twenties than I should admit on a public platform. My poor parents didn’t know what to do with me. I know they prayed for me. I know they tried to talk sense into me. I know they reached out to counselors, youth pastors, and friends for advice and support. I know, now, that they must have lost a lot of sleep worrying about me and spent a lot of money cleaning up the trail of heartbreak and disaster that l left in my self-centered adolescent wake.

My sweet daddy spent his first Christmas with Jesus this year. He passed away this October. I’m still devastated by his absence because he was my biggest fan. I look back on my childhood and my life as an adult and can’t recall a single moment in my entire life that I doubted his love for me. After his death, hundreds of people poured out their love for my dad in letters, posts, text messages, and conversations reminiscing about the love they felt from Dad and about how he made them feel special and accepted just for who they were. I’ve come to realize since losing Daddy that God gave me this earthly father as an amazing example of what unconditional love looks like. Apparently, no matter how wretched I was as a teenager, there was nothing I could do to make my daddy not love me and forgive me or want me to be reconciled unto himself. Were there consequences of my actions and choices? Absolutely. There are many struggles that I face even today as a 46-year-old that are direct results of my sinful past–burdens that I might bare until the day I meet Jesus myself; however, knowing that I was loved and forgiven by my earthly father is not one of them. For that I am forever grateful.

In Paul’s second letter to the church in Corinth, he assured them of their Heavenly Father’s love for them and His desire to reconcile them unto Himself. Paul tells them in chapter 5, “15And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again. 16So from now on we regard no one from a worldly point of view. Though we once regarded Christ in this way, we do so no longer. 17Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here! 18All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: 19that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting people’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation.”

So, what is this “message of reconciliation” about which Paul speaks? As you begin this new year, know in the deepest depths of your heart that there is nothing old in your past that God will not leave behind in His endless ocean of forgiveness. There is nothing you could have ever done that will make Him not love you today. As the old passes away in the new year, seek and rest in the One who is the source of that kind of love and who only desires to love and be loved by you no matter what–our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

The announcement

Back in the day, before we flooded timelines with baby pics, families would make announcements of baby arrivals in the local papers. In those black and white pages you could find families sharing all the details— parents’ names, baby’s name, gender, birth date, weight, length, and many times names of siblings and grandparents. It was like an invitation telling the whole town to join in on the excitement of the birth of their new baby.

“And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.” Luke 2:8-11 KJV

This birth announcement we read in the black and white pages of the bible isn’t about a typical birth. It’s not just about parents bringing a child into the world; it’s about a divine plan that God Himself orchestrated.

This birth was announced 700 years earlier by the prophet Isaiah— “For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given.” Isaiah 9:6

The announcement of Jesus’ birth surpasses as a simple birth announcement; it serves as a universal proclamation, resounding as both your personal announcement and mine. You and I can fill in the blanks with our names. “For unto _________________ a child is born, unto ______________ a son is given.”

“How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of the messenger who brings good news.” The words of Isaiah 52:7 celebrate the messengers who carry these good tidings, proclaiming them on the mountains and beyond.

Today there remains the timeless call to share the news far and wide. Christ’s birth serves as a reminder that we are all welcomed into the extraordinary story of redemption— a divine orchestration revealed in His arrival.

Go tell it on the mountain

Over the hills and everywhere

Go, tell it on the mountain

That Jesus Christ is born.

Don’t miss it

Bare feet on wooden stairs. Red nylon nightgowns that matched. Two sisters clattered down the stairs on a cool Christmas morning, running into a room that had seemed bare when they went to bed, but now resembled Santa’s workshop in all its glory. There were stockings, my favorite, and babydolls from Santa. Presents were wrapped under the tree, their endless possibilities almost dancing in the air before us. We felt like very lucky girls, indeed.

Against each wall stood a handcrafted desk with an attached shelf. We had run past them to get to the Christmas tree. They were beautifully made, polished to a high shine, gleaming in the reflection of the Christmas lights.

Neither girl mentioned the desks. Instead, they ran straight to the stockings. Inside were staples, erasers, paper clips, and all the things one would need to stock a desk. Still, no one mentioned the desks in the room.

One sister had asked for a desk of her own and had wanted it so much. She didn’t see the desk before her because of the lights and sounds of the season that competed with the presence of the desk.

The other sister saw the desks, but thought they were much too grand and special for the likes of her. Surely, they were for her parents. It didn’t seem like she was worthy of such a gift. It must be there for someone else.

Eventually, their mom told them of the gifts that were right in front of them. Of how their dad had made them for his two girls. How they were thought of especially as he made them.

The gift of the father seemed enormous. Shyly the girls eyed the desks then ran to them. They began stocking the drawers with paper clips and staplers and felt very grown up, and excited, and loved.

This Christmas, you might be like these two sisters. Like the second sister you may see a baby in a manger and think he is far too grand a gift for the likes of you. You might think you don’t deserve a gift so special, but your father in Heaven thought about you when he sent Jesus to be born as a baby.

Or, you may be like the first sister and simply not see the manger in light of all the hustle and bustle, and excitement of the season.

Don’t miss the splendor of the season by not noticing the gift in front of you. Jesus was born humbly in a stable, he lived a perfect life, and he died a violent death on a cross so that all who ask him to be Lord of their lives might be saved. Don’t think the gift is too grand or too special for you to accept. Just see the gift of Jesus and take it.

But God can

The other day the baby sister said to me, “Well, if you weren’t walking in cursive.” Cause if you know me then you know when I walk I’m all over the place. 🤣

It got me thinking about this journey we call life. One would assume it would be a straight shot – like normal people walking down a sidewalk. Side eye at myself and my cursive walking.

But it’s not.

It’s not a straight shot, and it doesn’t make any kind of sense. It’s not going to.

Let’s take it back to the Israelites in Exodus. God took them on a journey that was all twisty and turny and every which way. They didn’t understand it. How could they? They couldn’t see the big picture like He could.

What looked like a scribbled up Dora the Explorer map to some was actually a very well planned out excursion.

The pretty, perfect path would have had them ol’ Israelites end up right smack dab in the middle of a war – war they were not prepared to fight.

So God had them walk in cursive. They went this way and then they went that way – and unbeknownst to them they were strategically protected from the waging war that they would have happened upon if they would have taken the so-called pretty, perfect path.

Y’all, God may have you on a journey right now that you just don’t quite understand. And I can almost bet that you would like to play MapQuest for Him.

Don’t do it.

You can’t see the big picture.

You can’t see what’s in front of you.

You can’t see what’s surrounding you.

But God can.

Trust the journey He has placed before you.

And the LORD went before them by day in a pillar of cloud to lead the way, and by night in a pillar of fire to give them light, so as to go by day and night. Exodus 13:21

The light

Our pastor, Travis Hood, did a sermon on John 8:12 two weeks ago and I felt it was perfect to share with y’all this Christmas season.

I think it’s safe to say that everyone knows we live in a dark world and Christmas time is usually a distraction in the chaos. With all the decorations, lights, family and friend gatherings it’s easy to stay busy and forget about the darkness. But God has given us more than a distraction. He has given us hope that comes from the one who came to us in the darkness to save us.

John 8:12 Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”

We are born in a dark world, we stumble through life trying to find our way, bumping into things that are in our way that cause pain and suffering. We search in the darkness to satisfy ourselves and to find fulfillment. We pursue popularity, money, success. We abuse alcohol and drugs to escape the emptiness we feel in our life. We look to relationships to satisfy and comfort us. All of those things ultimately fail us. They only leads us deeper into the darkness.

The only way to overcome darkness is for a light to shine. The good news that Christmas brings is that Jesus Christ was born to bring light to the world. He says, “I am the light…” God didn’t leave us in the dark. He sent Jesus to bring light back into the world and overcome darkness.

Friend, you don’t have to stay in the dark, Jesus said, “Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light.” Through Christmas God offers us a light that is much more than just a distraction, God offers us a way out. That’s why we celebrate Christmas. Jesus is the light of the world.

All His

God speaks to me.

He does.

Not in a loud booming voice. It’s actually quite gentle. I remember the first time I heard Him. I was in second grade, and God told me {clear as day} that I would be an educator. We all see how that turned out.

I digress.

The other day I turned the corner from the hallway to the kitchen and He spoke clear as clear can be to this ol’ gal. You see I’d been making excuses. Excuses about why I couldn’t do some things. Important things. Excuses about not having enough time.

And He said – I can take some stuff away from you so you’ll “have” enough time.

That sucked the air right out of my lungs.

Because to be honest, I have plenty of time. I’m just not using it as wisely as I could be. I don’t want anything taken away from me! God has blessed me beyond measure.

I felt strongly that I needed to share this with y’all. Let’s all be good stewards of the time and things God has so graciously given us.

After all, it’s not ours. It’s His.

It’s all His.

15 Be very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise, 16 making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil. Ephesians 5:15-16

Be still. And know.

The last three and a half months have been the hardest months of my life. They have also been some of the most transformative months of my life. I graduated college, watched my mom get diagnosed with and beat cancer, and finished my first semester of graduate school.

A few weeks ago, when I was sitting at my desk, wanting to give up completely, God dropped something into my spirit: “Don’t place a period where God has placed a comma and don’t place a comma where God has placed a period.” It was a lot to take in. I had never heard this before but after doing a quick Google search (of course), I realized it was a quote that has been referred to quite a lot. “What does this mean?” I thought.

While we often hear to follow the Lord’s call and to trust, leaning not on our own understanding (Proverbs 3:5-6), what happens when we are standing at a crossroads, uncertain of the next step to take, and feel as though we are not hearing from God? In a world that never seems to slow down, where the constant rush can make it tough to find a moment of stillness, God’s wisdom reminds us to: “Be still and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10).

At times, when we feel as though we lack a sense of communication from God and it feels like His response is taking longer than expected, we tend to default, pursuing our own desires and decisions. We don’t want to wait for an answer, so we create our own, which can lead us down roads we were never meant to go down.

Sometimes being still is the only way to truly hear what God is telling us. Trust me – this is something that I constantly struggle with. Impatience can truly diminish what God is trying to do through us if we do not listen. Throughout the past several months, many people have told me that God was showing others His strength through my weakness. It sounds great and noble until you are the one that He is working in and through doing this.

Through these months though I have learned a lot of things about myself and about God. Sometimes He answers our prayers right away, sometimes it takes months or years to see Him bring them to fruition. Regardless, we are called to remain faithful, trusting that He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion (Philippians 1:6).

If you are holding on to that dream that God has placed in your heart, afraid that it is too late or not the “right time,” remember this: don’t place a period where God has placed a comma. Don’t give up on that dream. The same is true for those pushing hard to sustain something – be it a job, a relationship, or a dream – yet sensing it does not align with God’s plan for you. In these cases, resist the urge to place a comma where God has distinctly placed a period.

May this inspire others to embrace patience, remain steadfast in faith, trust in the unfolding beauty of the journey’s God has placed us on, and encourage us to remain still and know He alone is God and He is good.