When Life Does Not Make Sense

This last week in Facebook I read a story of a mother who is a believer and yet she felt that God had forsaken her. I was also reminded of a conversation with a man I play golf with when he made a statement, “If there is a God how could he allow my daughter to have MS.” Then there is a young couple I know with two children and the mother dies of cancer. How about an older couple I love who served God their whole lives spreading God's word, and the wife gets a crippling disease and then God takes her husband home, and now she is all alone in a care-home. Or how about the man who never wanted to make a vow to God but was led by God to make one. This man did everything that he said he would do and yet God did not answer the man's prayer in the way he thought. 
Life at times seems very confusing and difficult to understand; yet when our life is over, and we stand before God and ask him "why?" He will say that when you were going through these things you were only halfway through your book of life. Just like a mystery novel halfway through never makes sense, it only makes sense when you know the ending.
I wish I could say wise and comforting words to the young couple, the father and his daughter, or the elderly couple, those whose lives seem so useless now.  But as the one who made the vow to God and didn't get what he expected then, I can say: WAIT! Wait to see what God has planned for your life, with all the hurts and losses and even doubts about God. Don't give up your faith in the LORD! Stay in His Word believing what He says. It's in the waiting on God that we come to know Him better and better and how He feels about us and how His plans and ways are so much higher than ours.  God is for us, not against us!
When our life is complete will others who have watched your life be able to say that your life was not useless at all? 2 Corinthians 4:16-18 "Therefore, we do not lose heart. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So, fix your eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal."
When life gets hard it is very hard see this glory that God is talking about, therefore, we must be patient and soon we will understand it all. For now we only see through a glass dimly, but later we will see Him as He truly is: face to face.  Our life in retrospect will make beautiful sense and give glory to God.

The Purpose of Prayer

Yesterday while driving in my car, I listened to a man speaking about prayer, and a question suddenly came into my mind: Why do we pray if everything is already decided? If God already knows the beginning and the end, then what is the purpose of asking Him for anything at all?

 

The more I thought about it, the more I realized that prayer is often less about changing God’s mind and more about surrendering our own. We come to God asking Him to remove pain, heal sickness, open doors, and change circumstances because that is how we measure peace. Yet life does not always unfold the way we hoped. We pray, fast, cry, and still the sickness remains. The door stays closed. Heaven feels silent. Those are the moments that force us to confront what we truly believe about God.

 

As human beings, we only see the moment we are standing in, while God sees beyond what our eyes can understand. What feels meaningless today may one day reveal a purpose time itself could not immediately show us. History reflects this reality. During the Holocaust, millions of Jewish people cried out to God while living through unimaginable suffering. In the middle of such darkness, nothing made sense. Yet years later, the nation of Israel was reborn. This does not make suffering good, nor excuse evil, but it reminds us that God can still bring life out of ashes and purpose out of pain humanity cannot comprehend while living through it.

 

The same is often true in our own suffering. Sickness, weakness, and death remind us how temporary this life really is. We spend much of our lives trying to hold on to this world, while God continually points us toward eternity. A dying body is not always the end of the story. Sometimes it is the reminder that something greater awaits beyond this life.

 

Job understood this in a profound way. After losing everything, God eventually restored what he had lost, but Job’s greatest reward was not the blessings he received afterward. Through suffering he came to know God in a way he never had before. Job said, “I had only heard about You before, but now I have seen You with my own eyes.” His pain stripped away every false security until all that remained was God Himself.

 

Maybe that is the hidden purpose inside suffering. We ask God to remove the fire, while God uses the fire to remove everything keeping us from fully depending on Him. Comfort can sometimes make us forget our need for God, but brokenness has a way of bringing us face to face with eternity. There are moments when we do not understand why God allows certain pain to remain, yet we keep walking with Him anyway. Not because everything makes sense, but because somewhere deep within us we believe He sees what we cannot.

 

Perhaps that is why prayer matters so deeply. Prayer gives us hope. Not always hope that circumstances will immediately change, but hope that we are not alone within them. Hope that our suffering is not meaningless. Hope that God is still present even when He feels silent. Hope that pain does not get the final word. Prayer keeps the heart connected to the belief that beyond this moment, beyond this struggle, beyond this temporary life, God is still writing a greater story than we are able to see.

 

Sometimes the answer to prayer is healing. Sometimes it is strength to endure. Sometimes it is peace in the middle of uncertainty. But prayer always reminds us that darkness is never permanent for those who continue walking with God. As long as a person can still pray, they have not lost hope, because prayer itself is the refusal to believe that suffering, death, or despair will have the final victory.

 

“God never said the journey would be easy, but He did say the arrival would be worthwhile.” — Max Lucado

 

“For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.” — Romans 8:18

 

When Jesus Spoke to Death

This morning in my quiet time reading John chapter 11 in the NLT, I realized this miracle was never only about Lazarus. Jesus was revealing something far greater than the raising of one man from a grave. He was revealing His authority over death itself and giving hope to every person who would ever follow Him.

 

When Jesus arrived in Bethany, Lazarus had already been dead four days. The mourning had already begun. The tomb had already been sealed. Martha came to Jesus carrying the weight of grief and disappointment and said, “Lord, if only you had been here, my brother would not have died.” Mary later fell at His feet saying the very same words. They believed Jesus could heal sickness, but now they stood in front of something no human being could fix. Death looked final. Hope seemed buried behind the stone.

 

That is where so many people still live today. People stand beside hospital beds, gravesides, broken marriages, shattered dreams, and impossible situations whispering the same thing in their hearts: “Lord, if only You had been here.” From a human perspective, there are moments in life that feel too broken to recover from and too far gone to restore.

 

But when Jesus stood before the tomb, the Bible says, “A deep anger welled up within him, and he was deeply troubled.” Jesus was not angry at Martha and Mary for grieving. He was angry at what sin and death had done to humanity. He saw the pain, fear, separation, suffering, and hopelessness that death had brought into the world. Standing before that grave, Jesus confronted the enemy that had held humanity in bondage since the fall in Eden.

 

Then the shortest verse in Scripture reveals the heart of Christ: “Jesus wept.”

 

Jesus did not stand distant from human pain. He entered into it. He felt the sorrow of those mourning around Him. He wept beside the brokenhearted even while knowing resurrection was only moments away. That is the Savior believers follow today. He is not cold toward suffering. He is near to the grieving, close to the broken, and present in the darkest moments of life.

 

Then Jesus spoke words that still shake the foundations of fear and death today:

I\ am\ the\ resurrection\ and\ the\ life

 

In the NLT, Jesus says, “Anyone who believes in me will live, even after dying.” Jesus was not speaking only to Martha. He was speaking to every believer who would one day stand at a funeral, face death, or wonder if the grave is the end. He was declaring that death does not have the final word for those who belong to Him.

 

Then Jesus did what no man could ever do. Standing before a sealed tomb, He cried out with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out!” And the man who had been dead four days walked out alive.

 

The miracle proved the promise.

 

“Jesus stood before the grave angry at what death had done to humanity, then He spoke life into the impossible so we would know death is not the end for those who follow Him.”

— Michael Dietz

 

Jesus was showing the world that His promises about eternal life were real. He was proving that He has authority over the one thing humanity cannot conquer. Death bows before Christ.

 

This chapter gives believers hope that reaches beyond this life. The hope of those who follow Jesus is not built on emotion, religion, or wishful thinking. It is built on the One who stood before death and commanded it to release its hold. Later, Jesus Himself would walk out of His own tomb alive, forever defeating the power of the grave for those who trust in Him.

 

For followers of Jesus, death is no longer the end of the story. Because Christ lives, believers have the promise that one day sorrow will end, graves will open, tears will be wiped away, and eternal life with Him will begin. John chapter 11 reminds us that even when life feels surrounded by loss, hopelessness, and death, Jesus still stands before impossible situations declaring that He is the resurrection and the life.

 

WHEN GOD DOES NOT MAKE SENSE

There are moments in life when God’s ways seem impossible to understand. Moments when obedience leads into hardship, when prayers appear unanswered, and when circumstances contradict everything we thought God was doing. In those seasons, faith becomes a battle between what God has spoken and what our eyes can see.

 

Throughout Scripture, God repeatedly worked in ways that defied human understanding. Abraham was commanded to place Isaac on the altar. Gideon faced an army with only three hundred men. Peter stepped out onto water. Jehoshaphat marched toward battle after hearing the words, “The battle is not yours.” None of these situations made sense, yet every one of them revealed the same truth: God does not ask His people to trust what they understand. He asks them to trust Him.

 

Abraham stood over Isaac without understanding how God would remain faithful, yet he believed somehow the promise of God would still stand. He did not know how God would provide or how the story would end, but he knew God’s word would be the answer even when the situation before him made no sense. Abraham could not see the ram yet, but he climbed the mountain believing God was already ahead of him.

 

That same faith was seen in Babylon when Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego stood before King Nebuchadnezzar after refusing to bow before his golden image. The king ordered the furnace heated seven times hotter than normal, and the flames became so intense that the soldiers carrying the men to the fire were killed before reaching the opening. Everything pointed toward destruction. Their obedience to God appeared to lead them directly into suffering. Yet they stood before the king and declared that God was able to deliver them, but even if He did not, they still would not bow.

 

Then the impossible happened. The king looked into the furnace expecting to see three men consumed by flames, but instead he saw four men walking unharmed in the fire. The furnace became the place where the presence of God was revealed most clearly. What was meant to destroy them became the very place where God revealed His glory.

 

The same truth appeared in the storm on the Sea of Galilee. Jesus told His disciples to cross to the other side of the lake, but during the night a violent storm arose. Waves crashed into the boat until experienced fishermen believed they were going to die. Yet Jesus was asleep.

 

To the disciples, His silence felt confusing. While they fought to keep the boat afloat, He rested peacefully in the middle of the storm. Finally they woke Him and cried out, “Teacher, do You not care that we are perishing?”

 

How often people ask the same question when suffering increases and heaven feels silent. Fear convinces the heart that silence means abandonment. But Jesus had never left them.

 

He stood and rebuked the wind and the sea, and immediately the storm surrendered to His authority. Then He turned to the disciples and asked, “Why are you afraid? Where is your faith?” Before the storm ever began, Jesus had already declared the destination: “Let us go to the other side.” The storm was real, but it did not have authority over the word Christ had already spoken.

 

Faith is tested when circumstances appear to contradict the promises of God. Abraham stood over Isaac believing God would remain faithful. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego stood before the furnace refusing to bow. The disciples sat in a sinking boat while the Son of God slept beside them. In every story the situation looked impossible, yet in every story God revealed Himself in a way that could only be understood through faith.

 

The furnace revealed the fourth man in the fire. The storm revealed the One who commands the wind and the waves. The altar revealed that God Himself would provide the sacrifice.

 

When God does not make sense, believers must remember that God sees the entire story while they see only a single moment. The disciples saw a storm, but Jesus saw the other side. Abraham saw a sacrifice, but God saw a covenant. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego saw a furnace, but God saw an opportunity to reveal His glory.

 

Faith is not the absence of fear. Faith is choosing to trust God in the presence of fear. Sometimes God calms the storm, and sometimes He walks with His people through the fire, but in every season His presence remains greater than the trial itself.

 

“Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.” — Corrie ten Boom

 

The Price of Freedom Was Written in Blood

“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.” — Ronald Reagan

 

Memorial Day began after the Civil War, when grieving Americans gathered to place flowers on the graves of soldiers who never came home. What became known as “Decoration Day” eventually became Memorial Day, a sacred day set aside to remember those who gave their lives defending the freedoms Americans now enjoy every day.

 

Every freedom Americans possess today — the freedom to worship God openly, speak without fear, raise families in peace, build businesses, pursue dreams, and live as free people — was paid for by someone willing to stand in the path of evil, tyranny, and death. Freedom was purchased on battlefields soaked with blood. It was purchased by young men who stormed beaches knowing many would never return home. It was purchased by soldiers who threw themselves into gunfire to save the lives of brothers fighting beside them. It was purchased by Americans who died in distant lands so future generations could live in liberty.

 

Some came home beneath a folded American flag. Others returned carrying wounds no one could see. Missing limbs. Burned flesh. Broken bodies. Sleepless nights. Memories of explosions, screams, and fellow soldiers dying in their arms. Many survived the war physically, yet never truly escaped it emotionally. The price of freedom did not end when the fighting stopped. It continued in military hospitals, rehabilitation centers, cemeteries, and quiet homes where veterans carried pain and trauma for decades after the war was over.

 

Freedom has always carried a cost — not only to obtain it, but also to preserve it. That is why Memorial Day should remind every American that freedom should never be surrendered casually, traded cheaply, or trampled on carelessly. Too many men and women fought, bled, sacrificed, and died preserving these liberties for future generations to abandon them without a fight.

 

Every white cross standing in a military cemetery marks a life interrupted and a story unfinished. Every American flag placed beside a grave represents someone who willingly gave everything for people they would never meet. Entire futures were sacrificed so America could remain free.

 

At a time when the nation is distracted by politics, division, comfort, and self-interest, Memorial Day should bring Americans back to humility and gratitude. The liberties so many now take for granted exist only because others were willing to sacrifice everything to defend them.

 

The true meaning of Memorial Day is remembrance — honoring the fallen, honoring the wounded, and never forgetting that freedom survives only because brave men and women paid for it with blood, sacrifice, and courage.

 

Who Still Believes in the Constitution?

“Maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time.” — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries

 

“Democracy is under assault before our eyes.” — Governor Gavin Newsom

 

Those statements reveal far more than politics. They reveal a growing belief among many on the liberal left that winning power is more important than restraining it.

 

The Founders never created a pure democracy because they understood something history repeatedly proves true: power always expands unless it is restrained. That is why they created a constitutional republic built on limits, checks, divided authority, and protected freedoms. The Constitution was designed to keep government under control, not place citizens under the control of government.

 

But modern politics is no longer driven by constitutional restraint. It is increasingly driven by fear.

 

Americans are constantly told democracy is collapsing, extremism is everywhere, and political opponents are threats to the survival of the nation itself. Once people believe the country is on the edge of destruction, they become willing to accept almost anything in exchange for security and victory. Fear changes priorities. Liberty begins to feel less important than protection.

 

That is why every election becomes “the most important election of our lifetime.” Disagreement is no longer treated as normal political debate. Opposition itself becomes viewed as dangerous.

 

Once politics reaches that point, constitutional protections begin looking like obstacles instead of safeguards. Free speech becomes “misinformation.” Election integrity becomes “suppression.” Supreme Court rulings become “attacks on democracy.” Constitutional limits become barriers standing in the way of political goals.

 

The contradiction becomes impossible to ignore when Americans are told voter identification is unreasonable, despite the fact that citizens cannot board an airplane in this country without a REAL ID or government-issued identification. Americans need identification to bank, work, travel, and conduct ordinary business, yet proving identity to vote is somehow controversial.

 

At the same time unelected federal agencies continue expanding their authority over healthcare, education, banking, energy, labor, business, and even speech itself. Bureaucrats increasingly issue rules carrying the force of law despite never standing before voters. This is exactly the concentration of power the Founders warned would eventually threaten liberty.

 

Ronald Reagan once warned, “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” His words matter today more than ever because modern America increasingly looks to centralized power to solve every crisis, settle every debate, regulate every institution, and control every outcome. The larger government becomes, the smaller the space left for individual liberty.

 

The real divide in America is no longer simply Republican versus Democrat. The real divide is between those who believe government power must remain restrained by the Constitution and those who believe constitutional limits should bend whenever they interfere with political objectives.

 

The Founders understood something modern America is rapidly forgetting:

 

FREEDOM DOES NOT SURVIVE BECAUSE GOVERNMENT IS GOOD.

 

FREEDOM SURVIVES BECAUSE GOVERNMENT IS LIMITED.

 

AND THE MOMENT A NATION BEGINS SILENCING SPEECH, WEAPONIZING INSTITUTIONS, IGNORING CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITS, AND EXPANDING UNELECTED POWER IN THE NAME OF “PROTECTING DEMOCRACY,” IT IS NO LONGER DEFENDING FREEDOM — IT IS SLOWLY SURRENDERING IT.

Good Friends Ask Good Friends

Carol and I went to dinner the other night with some very dear friends of ours. Her husband is one of those rare men I jokingly call a “MacGyver.” The kind of guy who can fix almost anything with his hands. If something breaks, he figures it out. If someone needs help, he shows up without hesitation. During dinner, I mentioned that when things break around my house, sometimes I just pay to have them fixed because I do not want to deal with the hassle myself. He smiled at me and said something simple that stayed with me long after dinner ended. He said, “Good friends ask for help from good friends.”

 

As I drove home that night, I could not stop thinking about those words. In many ways, that simple statement captures what once made America so special. America did not become the greatest nation in the world because people depended on government for everything. America became strong because people depended on God, family, neighbors, churches, friendships, and communities. People carried one another through difficult seasons of life. When someone lost a job, neighbors stepped in. When a family struggled, churches helped quietly without cameras or politics. When someone’s roof leaked or car broke down, good people showed up because helping one another was simply what decent people did.

 

“What made America strong was never government carrying people. It was good people carrying one another.” — Unknown

 

That spirit came from biblical values deeply rooted in this country from the very beginning. Scripture teaches us to bear one another’s burdens, love our neighbors, work hard, give generously, and care for people in need. Those values built strong families, strong communities, and a strong nation. America was never perfect, but it became a place unlike anywhere else on earth because freedom and responsibility walked hand in hand.

 

That is why people from all over the world still long to come to America today. People do not flee oppression, poverty, corruption, and hopelessness to come to a country that failed. They come because America still represents opportunity, stability, faith, freedom, and the chance to build a better future. They come because generations before us built something extraordinary through sacrifice, discipline, faith, and hard work.

 

But what many Americans struggle to understand is why so many people arrive here seeking the blessings of America while also wanting to change the very values that created those blessings in the first place. Instead of embracing personal responsibility, strong communities, faith, and freedom, society increasingly pushes people toward dependence on government systems for every hardship and struggle. Compassion has slowly been replaced with entitlement, and personal responsibility is often treated like an outdated idea.

 

Real compassion is personal. It has a face. It has a heart. Government programs can send money, but they cannot replace a friend showing up at your door when life falls apart. They cannot replace a church family praying for you, a neighbor helping you rebuild, or good friends carrying burdens together. Bureaucracy has no soul. Policies cannot love people. Only people can truly do that.

 

Somewhere along the way, America began drifting from the very things that once made it strong. We replaced community with systems, faith with politics, and responsibility with dependency. Yet deep down, I still believe most people long for something more real. They long for connection, purpose, values, and communities where people genuinely care for one another again.

 

Maybe that is why my friend’s words hit me so deeply. “Good friends ask for help from good friends.” In one sentence, he reminded me of the kind of America many of us remember and still hope for — an America where people carried one another not because government demanded it, but because their faith, values, and humanity compelled them to do so.

 

Who Still Believes in the Constitution?

“Maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time.” — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries

 

“Democracy is under assault before our eyes.” — Governor Gavin Newsom

 

Those statements reveal far more than politics. They reveal a growing belief among many on the liberal left that winning power is more important than restraining it.

 

The Founders never created a pure democracy because they understood something history repeatedly proves true: power always expands unless it is restrained. That is why they created a constitutional republic built on limits, checks, divided authority, and protected freedoms. The Constitution was designed to keep government under control, not place citizens under the control of government.

 

But modern politics is no longer driven by constitutional restraint. It is increasingly driven by fear.

 

Americans are constantly told democracy is collapsing, extremism is everywhere, and political opponents are threats to the survival of the nation itself. Once people believe the country is on the edge of destruction, they become willing to accept almost anything in exchange for security and victory. Fear changes priorities. Liberty begins to feel less important than protection.

 

That is why every election becomes “the most important election of our lifetime.” Disagreement is no longer treated as normal political debate. Opposition itself becomes viewed as dangerous.

 

Once politics reaches that point, constitutional protections begin looking like obstacles instead of safeguards. Free speech becomes “misinformation.” Election integrity becomes “suppression.” Supreme Court rulings become “attacks on democracy.” Constitutional limits become barriers standing in the way of political goals.

 

The contradiction becomes impossible to ignore when Americans are told voter identification is unreasonable, despite the fact that citizens cannot board an airplane in this country without a REAL ID or government-issued identification. Americans need identification to bank, work, travel, and conduct ordinary business, yet proving identity to vote is somehow controversial.

 

At the same time unelected federal agencies continue expanding their authority over healthcare, education, banking, energy, labor, business, and even speech itself. Bureaucrats increasingly issue rules carrying the force of law despite never standing before voters. This is exactly the concentration of power the Founders warned would eventually threaten liberty.

 

Ronald Reagan once warned, “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” His words matter today more than ever because modern America increasingly looks to centralized power to solve every crisis, settle every debate, regulate every institution, and control every outcome. The larger government becomes, the smaller the space left for individual liberty.

 

The real divide in America is no longer simply Republican versus Democrat. The real divide is between those who believe government power must remain restrained by the Constitution and those who believe constitutional limits should bend whenever they interfere with political objectives.

 

The Founders understood something modern America is rapidly forgetting:

 

FREEDOM DOES NOT SURVIVE BECAUSE GOVERNMENT IS GOOD.

 

FREEDOM SURVIVES BECAUSE GOVERNMENT IS LIMITED.

 

AND THE MOMENT A NATION BEGINS SILENCING SPEECH, WEAPONIZING INSTITUTIONS, IGNORING CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITS, AND EXPANDING UNELECTED POWER IN THE NAME OF “PROTECTING DEMOCRACY,” IT IS NO LONGER DEFENDING FREEDOM — IT IS SLOWLY SURRENDERING IT.

 

Before the Creek Runs Dry

Yesterday on my walk I came upon a small creek that dries up during the summer until only scattered pools remain. As I stood there watching the shallow water move through the creek bed, I noticed small fish swimming through the current. They were not trapped yet, but I knew what was coming. In time, the creek would recede, the pools would shrink, and if the fish remained where they were too long, eventually they would be trapped. What struck me was that the fish had no awareness of what was ahead. There was still water around them. There was still food. The creek still looked alive. Nothing about their surroundings seemed dangerous.

 

The fish could only see the condition of the creek as it was in that moment. I could see beyond the moment because I understood what was coming. I knew that what looked safe today would eventually become dangerous if they remained there too long. It made me think about the church. Many believers assume that because life still feels normal, there is no real danger ahead. People still go to church, read their Bibles, pray, and continue familiar routines. Yet many fail to recognize the season we are living in because they are not connecting Scripture with what is unfolding in the world around them.

 

Jesus warned about this kind of blindness when He said, “The appearance of the sky you know how to discern, but the signs of the times you cannot discern.” — Matthew 16:3. The greatest dangers are rarely sudden. Most spiritual decline happens gradually, which is what makes it so dangerous. The fish in the creek felt no urgency because everything they needed still surrounded them. Comfort hid the danger. Abundance removed awareness. Yet the season was already changing. The same thing can happen spiritually. One way to recognize it is to look at where the church was fifty years ago, then ten years ago, and compare it to where we stand today. Things that once deeply grieved the hearts of believers are now tolerated, celebrated, or ignored entirely. Convictions that once stood firm have slowly eroded under the pressure of culture. The shift did not happen overnight. It happened gradually, which is why so many failed to recognize how much the environment around them had changed.

 

That is why understanding the nature of the danger matters so much. Some dangers come openly through persecution. Others come quietly through deception. Persecution pressures believers from the outside through fear, suffering, rejection, or loss. A persecuted believer understands they are being pressured to compromise their faith. But deception works differently. Deception rarely presents itself as evil. It often appears compassionate, reasonable, enlightened, or harmless. It slowly reshapes truth until compromise no longer troubles the conscience and spiritual drift begins to feel normal. That is why deception can be even more dangerous than persecution. Persecution attacks faith openly from the outside, while deception alters conviction silently from within. One attempts to force believers away from truth. The other slowly convinces them to redefine truth altogether.

 

God has never desired His people to walk unaware. Throughout Scripture He consistently warned His people beforehand because He loved them enough to prepare them. “Everything I prophesied has come true, and now I will prophesy again. I will tell you the future before it happens.” — Isaiah 42:9.

 

Prophecy is not given to create fear. It is given to awaken discernment. God reveals things beforehand so His people can recognize the season they are living in, so to be prepared, before the full weight of the moment arrives.

 

“The prudent sees danger and hides himself, but the simple go on and suffer for it.” — Proverbs 22:3.

 

Understanding the times we live in begins with seeing the world through the lens of Scripture instead of seeing Scripture through the lens of the world. It requires believers to pay attention not only to what God has said, but also to the direction culture, morality, truth, and the hearts of people are moving. Discernment grows when we stop assuming tomorrow will automatically look like yesterday and begin measuring what is happening around us against the Word of God. The church does not become prepared through panic, but through awareness, obedience, and spiritual clarity. The more deeply rooted we become in truth, the easier it is to recognize deception before it fully takes hold.

 

The fish still had time to move, but not forever. The danger was not immediate, which is precisely why it was easy to ignore. What looked safe in one season would become deadly in another. The tragedy would not be that the creek changed. The tragedy would be remaining in the same place because everything once felt secure there.

 

Sometimes the greatest danger is not sudden destruction but rather becoming so comfortable in a changing environment that we fail to recognize what is slowly disappearing around us until it is – too late.

 

Cracks in the Foundation

For the last year I have tried to write a “Just Some Thoughts” every day. The purpose has never been to attack people or pretend my generation was perfect. These are simply observations from an older man looking at society today. Every generation changes from the one before it. My parents’ generation was different from mine, and mine is different from younger generations today. Change itself is not the problem. What concerns me is the direction much of our culture seems to be moving.

 

One of the biggest changes I see is how personal responsibility has slowly weakened. Years ago, when families struggled, neighbors helped. Churches helped. Communities came together. People asked, “What can I do?” Today it often feels more like, “What should the government do?” Compassion is still talked about, but much of the responsibility has shifted away from the individual. Somewhere along the way we began losing the understanding that strong communities are built by people willing to help carry one another’s burdens.

 

At the same time, modern culture seems determined to change the meaning of value, identity, and self-worth. Look at advertising, movies, music, and social media. Young women are constantly told they must show more of themselves to be noticed. Modesty and self-respect are often treated as outdated ideas. Many young girls now grow up believing attention is the same thing as value.

 

Social media and entertainment constantly push the message that being provocative, sexually aggressive, and openly exposed is empowering. In many cases, young girls are no longer waiting to be pursued but are becoming the aggressors themselves because culture tells them their worth comes from attention, exposure, and validation. Instead of teaching dignity, modesty, and inner character, society rewards whatever gains the most views, followers, and attention. Over time this confuses both young women and young men about what healthy relationships and real respect are supposed to look like.

 

Young men seem just as lost. Society often tells them masculinity is dangerous while offering nothing meaningful to replace it. Many young men are searching for purpose but are being pulled toward selfishness, pleasure, entertainment, and shallow success instead of responsibility, discipline, and leadership.

 

Yet one of the greatest callings of a man has always been fatherhood, because true leadership, responsibility, protection, and sacrifice are first learned and displayed within the family. A strong father helps create a strong home, and strong homes become the foundation of strong communities and nations. Children learn security, discipline, respect, love, and values by watching the example of a father who is present, engaged, and willing to put his family before himself. When fathers become absent, weak, selfish, or disconnected, the family unit slowly weakens, and eventually society begins reflecting that same brokenness.

 

I also believe these cracks in the family are connected to the emotional struggles so many young people face today. I recently spoke with a young man who told me one of the common questions among his peers is, “Who is your therapist?” When I asked why so many young people feel overwhelmed, much of the answer centered around anxiety, depression, loneliness, hopelessness, and even suicide.

 

That should concern all of us.

 

Young people today have more technology, entertainment, comfort, and connection to the world than any generation before them, yet many seem more lost and emotionally fragile than ever. Perhaps it is because society has slowly removed many of the things that once gave people stability: faith, family, discipline, purpose, accountability, and community.

 

Now to be fair, this is not everyone. There are still many young men and women who have not been pulled into this way of thinking. There are young people who still value faith, hard work, family, responsibility, modesty, discipline, and truth. There are young fathers trying to lead their families well and young women who still carry dignity and self-respect. That gives me hope for the future.

 

These are not angry words from an old man criticizing the younger generation. They are simply observations from someone who has lived long enough to notice the cracks beginning to form in the foundations that once held society together.

 

Psalm 127:1 says, “Unless the Lord builds a house, the work of the builders is wasted.”

 

“The strength of a nation derives from the integrity of the home.” — Confucius

 

Quiet Enough to Hear – Strong Enough to Follow

Romans 10:17 says, “So faith comes from hearing, that is, hearing the Good News about Christ.”

 

Faith begins when God speaks, but faith becomes real when a person obeys what they have heard. Many people want God to show them the entire path before they move forward, but God often reveals only the next step. Obedience usually comes before understanding. That is why faith requires trust. If everything already made sense, faith would not be necessary.

 

The world we live in is filled with noise. Every direction is pulling for attention. Fear speaks constantly. Culture pressures people to conform. Social media floods the mind with endless distraction. Many people move through life without ever becoming still long enough to hear the quiet voice of God speaking into their spirit.

 

When people say, “I have never heard Jesus speak to me,” they are often expecting something dramatic while overlooking the ways He already speaks. God speaks through Scripture, through conviction, through wisdom, and through moments when truth settles deeply into the heart. The problem is not always that God is silent. Often the problem is that our lives have become too crowded to recognize His voice.

 

I learned this lesson personally many years ago during a season when work responsibilities consumed almost every part of my day. Meetings, schedules, pressure, and constant demands filled my life. Even then, I made it a priority to wake up early every morning to spend quiet time alone with the Lord because I knew I needed His direction more than my own.

 

One night around one o’clock in the morning, I suddenly woke up and could not go back to sleep. A thought kept pressing into my spirit repeatedly, and deep inside I knew the Lord was speaking to me. Exhausted and frustrated, I finally said, “Lord, why are You speaking to me now? You know I wake up early to spend time with You. Tomorrow I have appointments all day long. I need sleep.”

 

Then these words settled deeply into my heart: “I have been speaking to you all day. This is the first time you have been still enough to hear Me.”

 

That moment changed my understanding of faith. I realized God had never stopped speaking. My life had simply become so filled with movement and responsibility that I no longer recognized His voice clearly. Stillness was not empty time. Stillness was where hearing began.

 

But hearing is only the beginning. Once God speaks, responsibility follows. Noah heard God and built an ark before rain had ever fallen. Abraham heard God and walked away from everything familiar without knowing where he was going. Peter heard Jesus say “Come” and stepped onto water while everyone else remained safely in the boat. In every case, faith acted before the outcome was visible.

 

That is where many people struggle. They want guarantees before obedience. They want proof before movement. But faith trusts God enough to move forward even when the situation appears impossible.

 

Psalm 46:10 says, “Be still, and know that I am God.” Stillness positions the heart to hear, but courage is what allows a person to follow.

 

Jesus said in John 10:27, “My sheep hear my voice; I know them, and they follow me.” Hearing and following were never meant to be separated.

 

“The voice of God is rarely loud, but it is always clear to the heart willing to listen.” — A. W. Tozer

 

The Lord is still speaking. The question is whether we are quiet enough to hear Him and strong enough to obey Him.