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.

Truth, Freedom, and the Line We Must Draw

Truth is not something we reshape to fit our preferences, justify our actions, or redefine to make ourselves comfortable. It does not bend to culture, emotion, or personal desire. Truth stands on its own, unchanging and immovable, whether it is accepted or rejected. The real issue is not what truth is, but how each of us responds when it confronts us. Every person must decide whether they will accept truth, wrestle with it, reject it, or attempt to replace it with something easier. In that moment, character is revealed.

 

When truth confronts a person and they choose how to respond, it does not end there—it creates division. What we are witnessing in the world today is not simply disagreement, but a deeper conflict between what is true and what is false. Many will choose the lie over the truth, not because it is stronger, but because it is easier. The lie asks very little. It requires no surrender, no accountability, no change. It allows a person to remain exactly as they are. Yet what appears to be freedom is, in reality, a form of quiet slavery. Jesus said, “Whoever commits sin is a slave to sin” (John 8:34). The lie promises freedom, but it binds. It comforts, but it deceives.

 

That is why truth is often resisted. Truth demands something. It calls for surrender, humility, and transformation. It exposes what is hidden and confronts what is false. Yet it is also the only path to real freedom. Jesus said, “And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:32). Freedom is not found in doing whatever we want, but in living according to what is true. The road of truth is not always easy. It is often narrow, difficult, and at times lonely—but it is the only road that leads to life.

 

This tension between truth and falsehood is not new. Scripture warns, “Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; who put darkness for light, and light for darkness” (Isaiah 5:20). What we see around us is part of a long pattern of humanity choosing what is comfortable over what is true. As George Orwell is often credited with saying, “In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” Truth does not change because it is ignored, denied, or attacked. It remains.

 

Because truth remains, people are still confronted by it, and their response continues to shape how they live and how they influence others. Some will not only reject truth, but will actively promote what is false and attempt to draw others into it. Yet truth cannot be forced on anyone. It can be spoken, lived, and demonstrated, but it must be received. Each person is responsible for their own response. Your role is not to make others believe, but to remain grounded and unshaken.

 

This is where discernment becomes necessary. Since not all people respond the same way to truth, not all situations should be handled the same way. Some are open, willing to listen and consider. Others are hardened, resistant, or even hostile. Not every moment calls for argument. There is wisdom in knowing when to speak and when to step back. Jesus Himself said, “Do not cast your pearls before swine… lest they trample them under their feet, and turn and tear you in pieces” (Matthew 7:6). Truth is not to be thrown into chaos, but handled with wisdom.

 

This need for clarity and discernment becomes even more critical within your own home. Your home is a place of responsibility, influence, and protection. It is where your children are shaped and where truth is lived out daily. If someone brings behavior, words, or attitudes into your home that oppose what is truth, especially in front of your children, it must be addressed with clarity and authority. “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord” (Joshua 24:15). That is not merely a statement—it is a line drawn. Your home is not a place where truth is negotiated.

 

In the same way, when opposition becomes direct—when others attempt to pressure, mock, or intimidate you for standing in truth—you are not called to bend. You are called to stand. Firm, steady, and unmoved. The Apostle Paul writes, “Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth” (Ephesians 6:14). You do not need to overpower others; you simply refuse to be moved. There will be moments to speak clearly and moments to walk away, but in all things you remain anchored.

 

This standard does not change when you step into a place of worship. Where you worship carries the same weight. A place of worship should not reflect the shifting voices of culture, but the unchanging voice of truth. While people come broken and searching, truth itself must never be adjusted to accommodate what is false. If truth is compromised, then the foundation is weakened. Worship is about honoring God in truth and refusing to compromise what He has declared.

 

All of this leads to the deeper question beneath every conflict: what is truth, and where can it be found? Truth is not determined by majority opinion, social acceptance, or personal feeling. It does not evolve with time. If truth could change, it would no longer be truth. As R. C. Sproul said, “Truth is defined by God, not by our desires.” Truth must be constant, fixed, and rooted beyond human influence.

 

For many, that foundation is found in God, who does not change, and in His Word, for His Word is truth (John 17:17). Truth is not something we create, but something we discover, submit to, and live out.

 

In the end, each person is accountable for how they respond to truth. Truth gives life—real life, full and abundant. It brings clarity where there was once confusion, direction where there was once uncertainty, and peace that is not shaken by circumstances. It establishes a firm foundation that does not move.

 

To walk in truth is to walk in what is real, what is lasting, and what is secure. It is to live with purpose, with strength, and with a clear path forward. Truth does not leave a person empty; it fills, strengthens, and sustains.

 

So, the question is no longer what truth is.

 

For Such a Time as This – The Courage to Stand When It Matters Most

When I look at what is happening with Iran today, I cannot help but recognize a familiar moment in history. Time and again, the world has faced rising threats, and leaders have been forced to make the same difficult choice: act early and face criticism, or wait and risk something far worse.

 

History shows that some of the greatest leaders were not followed at first. They were resisted. Winston Churchill stood almost alone when others in Britain were desperate for peace at any cost. They warned him that he was too aggressive, too dangerous, that he would lead them into destruction. But Churchill understood something deeper. He saw that ignoring a growing threat does not remove it. It only gives it time to grow stronger. As he said, “An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.”

 

Abraham Lincoln faced relentless opposition. Many demanded compromise for the sake of peace, even if it meant allowing injustice to continue. He was attacked from every direction, accused of going too far, of tearing the country apart. Yet he stood firm, knowing that truth is not determined by public opinion. Lincoln said, “I am not bound to win, but I am bound to be true. I am not bound to succeed, but I am bound to live up to what light I have.”

 

Golda Meir stood in one of the most dangerous moments her nation had ever faced. Surrounded by enemies and under sudden attack, she carried the weight of decisions that would determine survival. There were doubts, second-guessing, and criticism from many directions. The stakes were survival itself. Yet she stood firm, knowing that hesitation in the face of real danger could come at an unbearable cost. As Golda Meir said, “You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist.”

 

Each of these leaders stood in moments where the easier path was to delay, to soften, or to avoid confrontation. Each of them paid a price for refusing to do so. They were criticized, isolated, and heavily opposed. In their time, many believed they were wrong. But history tells a different story. Time revealed what the moment could not. Their decisions, once questioned, were later honored. What was once called dangerous was later understood as necessary.

 

That is why moments like today matter. In our time, we are once again watching leaders make decisions under intense pressure, and just as in the past, the response is immediate and divided. Many voices in the media and political leadership are raising alarms. They warn of escalation, question the reasoning, challenge the facts, and criticize the approach. They speak of instability, unintended consequences, and the dangers of acting too quickly. Some question motives. Others question judgment. The criticism is constant, and the narrative forms almost instantly.

 

But that is not a new pattern. It is the same response that has met leaders in every generation when they chose to act instead of wait. It is the voice of caution, the voice of fear, the voice that says “not now,” even when the threat continues to grow.

 

When people look only at today, they will always be short-sighted. They react to headlines, to pressure, and to fear of being wrong in the moment. But the decisions that shape history are rarely the ones that feel safe when they are made.

 

Scripture reminds us that God raises up leaders for specific moments in time. Esther 4:14 says, “And who knows but that you have come to your royal position for such a time as this?” Throughout history, that truth has been proven again and again. God raises up leaders in difficult seasons, men and women willing to stand firm when others hesitate, willing to be misunderstood rather than compromise what they believe is right, and willing to act when the cost of inaction is too great.

 

Today, we do not need leaders who are guided only by fear, popularity, or the shifting winds of opinion. We need leaders with conviction, leaders who can see beyond the moment, who understand the weight of what is at stake, and who are willing to stand when others step back.

 

In the end, history does not remember who was the loudest in the moment. It remembers who had the courage to stand when it mattered most.

 

What I Have Come to Know

I have been watching what is going on in the world, Lord, and I see it clearly for what it is. I have lived long enough to know that these things do not happen without purpose. There have always been seasons like this, but now it feels like everything is accelerating. Wars continue, nations are divided, economies are strained, and people are searching for stability in things that cannot hold. The noise from the media never stops, and powerful voices keep trying to shape what people believe is true. But I understand this is written and it will be fulfilled, and nothing is outside of Your control.

 

What I feel is not confusion, and it is not doubt. It is the weight of knowing that strength is required in a time like this. Not just for me, but for my children and my grandchildren. They are growing up in a world far different than the one I knew, and they will need something deeper than what this world can offer. They will need truth that does not change and faith that does not break under pressure. I am reminded that strength is not something we avoid asking for, but something we must be willing to carry, because as John F. Kennedy once said, we are not to pray for easy lives, but to be stronger men.

 

And I know this, truth has not changed. The truth is still the truth, even if no one believes it, and a lie is still a lie, even if everyone believes it. No matter how loud the world becomes, no matter how convincing the voices of influence may sound, none of it overrides what You have already established. You are still the foundation, whether people acknowledge it or not.

 

I have seen enough in this life to know where trust belongs. I have seen people place their confidence in money, in leaders, and in systems, and I have watched those things fail time and time again. But I have also seen Your faithfulness remain steady through every season. There were times I could not see the way forward, times I did not have the strength for what was in front of me, and yet You carried me through it. Looking back, I can see You were there every time, even when I did not fully understand it in the moment. That has not changed, and it will not change now. And even when I could not see the full path ahead, I kept moving forward, trusting You one step at a time, knowing that faith does not require full visibility, only obedience to the next step, as Martin Luther King Jr. once said, taking the first step even when you do not see the whole staircase.

 

So I am not shaken by what I see, but I am aware of what is required. I need to stand firm. I need to be steady. I need to carry strength that does not come from this world. My children and my grandchildren will have to seek You for themselves, but I can tell them what my life has shown me, that You are faithful, and You do not fail.

 

The world will continue to shift, just as it always has. Nations will rise and fall, leaders will come and go, and fear will move from one place to another. I have seen enough to know that none of that is new. What matters is not what is changing around me, but what remains unchanging in You. Your word reminds me that even when we are pressed on every side, we are not crushed, and even when we do not understand everything, we are not without hope. What is happening around us is temporary, but what You are doing within us is eternal.

 

So I will keep moving forward with You, steady and unmoved. Not because life is easy, but because I know who You are and I have seen Your faithfulness over time. You are still in control, no matter what the world claims, no matter who holds power, and no matter how uncertain things may appear. That is enough for me to stand.

 

This is why I write these thoughts, so that my children and my grandchildren may one day read them. And it is my prayer that in times like these, they will see what Carol and I believed, and how faithful our Savior has been through every season of our lives, and that they will come to know Him for themselves as we have.

 

Someone Is Watching

This morning, as I walked, my thoughts kept returning to leadership in our country—not just who is leading, but what their leadership is producing. Over time, results reveal what words often try to cover. But as that thought settled in, something deeper became clear: leadership is not just something happening “out there” in government or positions of power. It is something happening in every one of our lives. Whether we realize it or not, we are all leading someone. It may be our children, our family, our coworkers, or simply those who observe how we live—but someone is watching, and someone is being influenced.

 

Jesus made this reality clear when He said, “Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:16). Our lives are not hidden. They are visible, and they are speaking, whether we intend them to or not. As it has been said, “Your life is your message to the world. Make sure it’s inspiring.” People are reading that message every day.

That realization led me to the Word of God, where I began to see that leadership itself has not changed. The settings may be different, but the patterns remain the same. Scripture reveals four distinct types of leaders, and once you understand them, you begin to recognize their presence not only in the world around you, but even in yourself.

 

The first is what I would call Saul leadership. Saul had all the outward qualities people naturally look for—appearance, strength, and ability. He looked like a leader. But what ultimately defined him was not his strength, but his fear. He feared people more than he feared God, and that fear led him to compromise. He adjusted truth to maintain approval and made decisions based on pressure rather than conviction. This kind of leadership often appears strong at first, but it cannot remain steady because it is rooted in insecurity. As Max Lucado put it, “A man who wants to lead the orchestra must turn his back on the crowd.” Saul never could, and that is why his leadership eventually failed.

 

In contrast to Saul is Samuel leadership, which operates from a completely different foundation. Samuel was not shaped by public opinion or elevated by popularity. He was appointed by God to speak truth, especially when that truth was difficult to hear. Samuel leaders serve as a moral and spiritual anchor, calling people back when they begin to drift. Because of this, they are often resisted or rejected, since truth confronts what people would rather ignore. Yet this kind of leadership is essential, not just on a national level, but in everyday life. Sometimes being a Samuel simply means being the one in your home, your workplace, or your circle who chooses to speak truth with courage, even when it is uncomfortable.

 

Then there is David leadership, which is often misunderstood because it does not reflect perfection. David’s life included failure and deep mistakes, yet what defined him was his continual return to God. His leadership was marked by humility, repentance, and a genuine pursuit of God’s heart. David leaders are often formed in hidden places and shaped through difficulty rather than ease. They carry both courage and compassion—they are willing to stand for what is right and protect others, while maintaining a deep love for God and people. This is the kind of leadership that is lived out daily in the small moments—how a father leads his children, how a person responds when they fail, how someone chooses to turn back to God again and again. And again, that truth remains: your life is speaking, and someone is learning from it.

 

However, when truth is rejected, when voices like Samuel are ignored, and when the heart of David is absent, another type of leadership emerges. This is what can be described as Jehu leadership. Jehu is not refined or cautious; he is direct, disruptive, and often misunderstood. His purpose is not to preserve what exists, but to confront and remove what has become corrupt. Because of this, he is often labeled extreme, yet his role is specific—he appears when compromise has been allowed to remain for too long. Even here, there is a reflection point, because when smaller areas of our own lives go unchecked—when truth is ignored or delayed—correction often becomes more forceful later.

 

All of this brings the focus back to something personal and unavoidable: we are all leading. Leadership is not defined by a title, but by influence, and influence is something every person has. If you are a parent, your children are watching how you live, what you value, and how you respond under pressure. If you are around others in any capacity, they are observing your consistency, your integrity, and your priorities. Even when it feels like no one is paying attention, someone is learning from your example.

 

Because of that, leading people—especially leading them toward Christ—requires a clear and steady foundation. It begins with clarity, a true understanding of the Gospel—who Jesus is, what He has done, and why it matters. Without clarity, there is no direction to give. From that clarity comes confidence, not in a loud or forceful way, but in a steady faith that holds under pressure. People are drawn to those who are grounded, not those who shift with every circumstance.

 

That foundation must be supported by integrity, where belief and behavior align. This is where leadership becomes visible, because people follow what they see lived out more than what they hear explained. From there, it becomes example—walking daily with Christ in a way that others can observe. No one can lead someone somewhere they are not going themselves, and the consistency of that walk over time builds trust that words alone never can.

 

At the center of it all is conviction, a deep belief that truth is real, that it matters, and that it is not something to be adjusted based on culture or convenience. And alongside that conviction must be genuine care for people. Leadership that leads others to Christ is not built on pressure, but on relationship—listening, walking alongside others, and showing real love.

 

This is why what we are seeing in our nation carries deeper meaning than politics alone. It reflects a shift in how truth itself is understood. There is a growing movement away from the belief that rights come from God, toward the idea that they are defined by institutions. That shift changes how people understand morality, responsibility, and purpose, and when that foundation moves, leadership inevitably follows.

 

When truth becomes negotiable, clarity fades and conviction weakens, and the type of leadership that rises will always reflect the condition of the people. But that reality does not remove responsibility from individuals—it actually places it more directly on each of us.

 

Because in the end, the question is not just what kind of leaders exist in the world, but what kind of leader each of us is choosing to be. Whether through our words, our actions, or our daily decisions, we are shaping those who are watching us.

 

The Day Exposure Comes

Every day the headlines are exposing what was hidden, with names once trusted now being questioned and leaders once praised now facing investigation, whether it is a congressman tied to serious accusations or powerful figures gaining wealth in ways that raise deeper concerns, showing again and again that those who appeared untouchable are not beyond exposure and that what was done in secret is now coming into the light.

 

This is not random or rare, it is constant and unavoidable, because power may look strong but it cannot protect the truth forever, and influence may delay consequences but it cannot stop them, as people convince themselves they are safe and will not be found out, while sin does not disappear but instead builds over time, waiting for the moment when it reveals itself and everything hidden begins to surface.

 

“For there is nothing hidden that will not be disclosed, and nothing concealed that will not be known or brought out into the open.”

— Luke 8:17

 

As this continues, there are always those who suffer under it, people who have been used, overlooked, or crushed by decisions made behind closed doors, whose voices were ignored and whose pain was dismissed, yet none of it is unseen because God hears every cry for justice and sees every wrong done in silence, and the weight of that injustice does not disappear simply because others refuse to see it.

 

“Justice will not be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are.”

— Benjamin Franklin

 

Jesus sees all of it with complete clarity, not just what reaches the headlines but what never will, seeing the lies, the greed, the misuse of power, and the damage left behind, knowing every hidden act and every private compromise, with nothing escaping His sight and nothing remaining covered before Him, as every life, every action, and every hidden thing stands fully exposed before Him.

 

“No man can escape the judgment of God.”

— A.W. Tozer

 

And while it may look like nothing is happening, what is really being seen is mercy, because time is being given not as approval but as an opportunity for what is hidden to be brought into the light willingly before it is exposed completely, yet that time is not endless and will come to an end when patience gives way to judgment.

 

There is a day coming when Jesus will deal with all of it fully and without exception, exposing what has been covered, bringing down what was built on lies, and holding every person accountable regardless of their power, wealth, or position, as everything is brought into the light and every false sense of security is stripped away.

 

What is being seen in the headlines now is only a glimpse and a warning, revealing that what is hidden will not stay hidden, that what is built on corruption will not stand, and that no one escapes the truth forever, because what Jesus sees, He will bring into the light.

From the Beginning to Eternity

This morning in my reading of the Bible in John chapter 1, I sat with the words I already know, but this time I stayed in them longer.

 

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” There is no room in that for uncertainty. This is not something developing or becoming. This is someone who already is. Before anything exists, He is there. Before anything is created, He is not part of it. He stands outside of it as God. Then John removes any possible misunderstanding. “All things were made through Him, and without Him was not anything made that was made.” Everything I see, everything I experience, even my own life, came through Him. Genesis says God created all things. Isaiah says He alone stretched out the heavens. There is only one Creator, and John does not introduce another. He reveals that Jesus is that Creator.

 

And then the weight of it presses even further. “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” The Creator stepped into creation. The One who formed the body took on a body. The One who is not bound by time entered into time. He did not observe life from a distance. He lived inside it. He lived under the same limits, the same pressures, the same realities that I feel every day. Hunger, exhaustion, rejection, suffering. Not because He had to, but because He chose to.

 

This stands completely apart from everything else. Every other religion begins with a man inside creation trying to reach God or explain Him. They do not claim to have made the world. They do not claim to exist before it. They do not claim to be the source of life itself. When they speak of Jesus, they must reduce Him, make Him created, or call Him something less, because the truth that He is God does not fit within what they teach. Scripture does not allow that. “For in Him all the fullness of Deity dwells bodily” (Colossians 2:9). “By Him all things were created… and in Him all things hold together” (Colossians 1:16–17). “Before Abraham was, I am” (John 8:58). “My Lord and my God” (John 20:28). This is not open to change. Jesus is God.

 

That truth meets life where it actually is. Life carries weight that does not let up. There are responsibilities that keep coming, decisions that matter, pressure that builds, and moments where fear is real. There are things that do not go the way I expect, situations I cannot control, and questions I cannot answer. Left on my own, all of that sits on me. I try to manage it, carry it, and make sense of it with limited understanding and strength. The One who created everything stepped into this world and still stands over it.

 

When I come to Him, I am not coming to an idea or a system. I am coming to the One who made me and fully understands what I am facing. He gives direction when I do not see clearly, steadiness when everything feels unstable, and strength when I reach the end of myself. He does not remove the reality of life, but He changes how I walk through it because I am not carrying it alone.

 

And as I sat there, it became clear that this does not just speak to how I walk through today, but to where I am going. The One who was in the beginning is already at the end. My future is not open or undefined to Him. It is already known and already held by Him.

 

The same One who stepped into this world and walked within it is the One who speaks about what comes after it with authority. “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6). There are not many paths that lead to God, because there is only one who stands outside of creation, entered into it, and has authority over life and death. “I give them eternal life, and they will never perish” (John 10:28). “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in Me, though he dies, yet shall he live” (John 11:25).

 

So this is where it settles. The One who created everything chose to step into this world, to walk through the same realities I face, and to remain present in them. And at the same time, He is the One who holds what comes after this life. That means I am not just looking to Him to help me get through today. I am looking to Him as the only One who carries me into what is beyond today. There is not another path that leads there. There is not another name that holds that authority. The One who was in the beginning, who walked in this world, is the same One who brings me into eternity, and there is no other way to the Father but through Him.

 

The King Is Coming

Eschatology can feel overwhelming because there are so many opinions, interpretations, and debates. People hold strong beliefs, and when those beliefs are challenged, it creates confusion and even division. I am not here to argue a position or push a system. I am not trying to convince you of my view. I simply want to step back, let Jesus speak for Himself, and allow you to hear what He said and come to your own conclusions.

 

Jesus did not just describe events. He revealed a pattern that leads somewhere. He spoke of wars, division, famine, disease, fear, and lawlessness, and He called them birth pains. Birth pains are not random. They are not meaningless. They signal that something is coming and that it is close. They increase in intensity and frequency, and they move toward a moment that cannot be stopped. This means it is not a time to ignore what is happening, but a time to recognize it and prepare.

 

When you look at the world right now, it is hard to ignore how closely it reflects what He described. War is no longer isolated or short lived. Conflicts continue without true resolution, tensions rise between nations, and even when there are pauses, peace never fully holds. At the same time, nations are not just clashing externally, they are breaking internally. Division runs through governments, cultures, and even families.

 

The systems people once trusted are also beginning to strain. Economies shift, supply chains break, and what once felt stable no longer holds. Food, energy, and financial systems reveal how fragile everything really is, where one disruption in one place now affects the entire world. Disease has already shown how quickly everything can shut down, how fast fear can spread, and how deeply life can be altered.

 

But beyond all of that, something deeper is happening. Truth itself is being destabilized. What was once clearly right is now questioned, and what was once clearly wrong is often defended. Across society, we are seeing what Scripture warned about, that good would be called evil and evil would be called good. Respect is fading, authority is rejected, and what was once hidden is now openly celebrated. This is not just change. It is moral inversion.

 

When truth collapses, people do not become stable, they become desperate. And this is where the pattern Jesus described becomes clear. The chaos we are seeing is not only creating pain, it is creating demand. A demand for peace where there is war, for order where there is confusion, and for stability where everything feels uncertain. As pressure increases, people become more willing to accept solutions they once would have questioned.

 

Scripture warns that when that moment comes, the answer will not look obviously false. It will be convincing. It will appear to solve what the world cannot fix. It will promise peace, order, and stability. And because the world has been shaken, divided, and worn down, many will receive it, not because they are forced, but because they are ready.

 

This is why the birth pains matter. They are not just signs of trouble; they are shaping the conditions. The world is being pressed to the point where it will accept what it once rejected. The chaos is not random; it is preparing the ground.

 

Jesus said this is only the beginning. That means greater pressure is coming, deeper deception, and a level of shaking the world has never seen. Everything that can be shaken will be shaken. What people trust in will not hold. What is hidden will be revealed, and the line between truth and deception will become clear.

 

And at the height of that pressure, when the world reaches its breaking point, He returns. Not quietly, not symbolically, but with power, authority, and finality. The same Jesus who warned of the birth pains will be seen by all.

 

So the question is no longer just what is happening. The question is what we do.

 

When birth pains begin, people do not ignore them. They do not debate them. They prepare, because they know the moment is close. But they also anticipate, because they know something beautiful is about to happen. The pain carries purpose, and that purpose produces expectation.

 

In the same way, we do not respond with fear, we respond with joy. We rejoice because our King is coming. His return is not distant or uncertain, it is imminent, and with Him comes the fulfillment of everything promised. This is not the end of hope; it is the arrival of it.

 

So we do not fix our eyes on the pain of this moment. We see it, but we are not weighed down by it. Our hearts are not heavy, they are expectant. What we are witnessing is not the collapse of everything, but the transition into what has been promised.

 

Because what is coming is life with Jesus. A restored world. A kingdom that cannot be shaken. A reign of righteousness, peace, and truth that will never end.

 

The birth pains are not the end of the story, they are the announcement.

 

“The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let the one who hears say, Come. He who testifies to these things says, Surely I am coming soon. Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.” Revelation 22:17, 20

The Hidden Work of God

“A mature judge does not rush to conclusions—they wait for God to reveal what is hidden.”

 

Over the years in the church, I have heard people speak about others and say, “I see no fruit… they openly denied the faith… look at their actions.” As though this is the full measure of a person—based only on what we can see, what we hear, or what we observe. It sounds right. It sounds wise. But it is often incomplete.

 

The Bible gives us a clear warning about this kind of judgment through Job’s friends. They looked at Job’s life, saw his suffering, and made a conclusion. In their experience, suffering meant sin. They had seen patterns, they had understanding, and they spoke with confidence. But they were wrong. God later said they had not spoken what was right about Him. Their problem was not that they saw something—it was that they believed what they saw was the whole truth.

 

And we can do the same thing. A lack of visible fruit does not always mean there is no life. A tree can be alive and still not producing at the moment. It may be struggling in ways we cannot see. So when we say, “I don’t see fruit,” we may be right in what we observe, but wrong in what we conclude. This is where we must slow down and become more careful in how we judge.

 

If we are honest, there are times we say, “This is what the Spirit is showing me,” but our own thoughts are so loud—our experiences, our opinions, even our wounds—that we cannot clearly hear Him. What feels like discernment can actually be reaction. In those moments, wisdom is not found in speaking quickly, but in stepping back, taking it to the Lord, and waiting. Right judgment is not rushed; it is formed in humility and patience.

 

We also have to hold firmly to this truth: if the Spirit truly lives in someone, He does not leave them. God does not begin a work and abandon it. So what we may be seeing is not someone who has been left by God, but someone who is struggling, resisting, or in pain. And if we judge too quickly, we risk misreading what God is still actively doing.

 

This is where the story of Peter becomes so powerful. Peter didn’t just fail—he denied Jesus three times, publicly and in fear. If we were judging by what we saw, we would say, “There is no fruit. Look at his actions.” We might even conclude that he had turned away completely. But when Jesus comes to Peter after the resurrection, He does not approach him the way we often approach one another. He does not ask him to explain himself. He does not confront him with his failure. He does not even ask, “Why did you deny Me?” Instead, He asks a deeper question: “Do you love Me?”

 

In that moment, Jesus goes straight to the heart. Not the action, but the root. Because He knew something we are still learning—failure does not always mean separation. The real question is not simply what someone has done, but where their heart is.

 

I have experienced this in my own life. There have been people who were in deep pain who would not even let me hug them. They would pull away, resist, and refuse. But if I stayed consistent, if I kept showing up and reaching out, they would eventually break down and let it out. It was never truly rejection—it was pain that had not yet been released. This is what I believe Jesus did with Peter. He did not withdraw because of Peter’s denial. He moved toward him, stayed present, and kept reaching, not to expose him, but to restore him.

 

And when Peter responds, Jesus does something even more powerful—He entrusts him again with responsibility. “Feed My sheep.” He does not define Peter by his worst moment. He restores him based on what is still alive in him—his love for Christ.

 

This is how we must learn to judge. Not ignoring fruit, but not stopping there either. Not reacting to failure, but looking deeper and asking, “Is there still love for Christ? Is there still something alive inside?” Because where there is still love, there is still life. And when we see that—even if it is faint, even if it is buried under pain, failure, or resistance—we are not called to step back in judgment, but to step in through prayer. We begin to pray not with accusation, but with faith, asking the Lord to strengthen what remains, to stir their love for Him again, to heal what is wounded, and to break through whatever is holding them back. We pray with patience, trusting that God sees what we cannot see and is able to reach deeper than we ever could. Instead of writing them off, we partner with God, believing that what is still alive in them can grow, be restored, and bear fruit in His time.

 

And in all of this, we begin to understand that this is part of our calling. Scripture tells us that the saints will judge the world. Jesus commands us not to judge by appearances, but to judge rightly. And we are told that maturity comes as we are trained to discern good and evil. This means we are learning now. Through people, through situations, through moments where we are tempted to say, “I see it clearly,” and God gently reminds us, “Look again.”

 

He is teaching us to slow down, to listen, to wait, and to love. Because you cannot judge like Christ if you do not love like Christ. Even when you have been hurt. Even when someone has failed. Just as Jesus moved toward Peter, we are called to move toward others with truth and mercy together.

 

In the end, a mature judge does not simply say, “I see no fruit.” A mature judge says, “I see something, but I do not yet see everything. Lord, show me what is true.” Because only God sees the root, and where the root remains, there is still hope, still life, and still the hidden work of God unfolding.

 

Beyond the Walls

The church has been misunderstood over time. Many people today think the church is a building, a service, or an organization. The world often sees it as a system filled with rules, structure, and sometimes failure. But when Jesus spoke about the church, He was not talking about a place. He used the word ekklesia, which means a people who are called out. The church is not somewhere you go. It is a people who belong to Him. It is a living body, a family joined together in Christ.

 

Because of this, the command in Scripture not to forsake gathering together is often misunderstood. It is not about attending a building or following a routine. It is about staying connected to other believers. God did not create us to live alone. We need one another for strength, encouragement, and growth. When someone steps away from fellowship, they are not just leaving a meeting, they are stepping away from support that God designed for them.

 

Many people who truly love Jesus are no longer part of gatherings. This is not always because they have turned away from God. Many have been hurt. Some have seen hypocrisy. Others have become discouraged or tired. Their reasons are real. But even when they step away, God does not leave them. The Holy Spirit continues to speak to them and draw them. God is still pursuing them.

 

This is where the responsibility of the church becomes clear. Jesus showed us that God does not wait. In the story of the lost sheep, the shepherd goes out to find the one who is lost. He does not sit back and wait for it to return. This shows us that reaching people is not about asking them to come. It is about going to them. It is about meeting them where they are and walking with them through what they are facing.

 

But how we go matters. It is not through arguments. It is not through pressure. It is not through trying to prove that we are right. It must be done in love, without judgment. The one who goes must first pray. They must ask God to search their heart and make their motives right. They must go for the same reason Jesus would go, not to correct from a distance, but to restore and bring life. When love leads, walls begin to come down and truth can be received.

 

“The church has many organizers, but few agonizers.” — Leonard Ravenhill

 

What is needed is not more plans or structure, but hearts that are burdened, broken, and willing to carry the weight of others in prayer and love.

 

There are also those who are called to go outside what many consider normal church settings. This is not something new. John the Baptist did not stay within the religious system of his time. He went into the wilderness and the people came to him. Jesus did not stay in one place. He walked among the people. He went into their homes. He sat with those who were rejected. He lived life with them. His ministry was personal and real.

 

This same truth is seen in the film A Great Awakening, which shows the life of George Whitefield. It makes it clear that structure is not what brings awakening. Awakening comes through obedience. It comes when a life is changed by Jesus and that person is willing to go. Whitefield went into prisons and reached people others ignored. He humbled himself and even washed their feet. Through this, many came to know Jesus. He understood that if his calling was not accepted inside the church, he would go outside the walls and reach the people directly. He showed that the work of Jesus is not limited to a place. It moves through those who are willing to obey.

This shows us that awakening does not come from sitting in tradition and looking down on others. It comes from stepping into people’s lives with love. It means helping them in their struggles, walking with them, and showing them who Jesus truly is. This is not leaving the church. This is the church being lived out.

 

At the same time, gathering still matters. Going and gathering are not against each other. They work together. Gathering strengthens us. It teaches us and builds us up. Going allows us to live out what we have received. If we only gather, we become focused on ourselves. If we only go without staying connected, we become weak. God’s design is both. We are filled together, and then we go out and pour into others.

 

We must also be careful of tradition. Jesus warned about this. He spoke against those who allowed their traditions to replace the truth of God. Tradition becomes dangerous when it replaces relationship. It becomes harmful when it blocks the work of God. The problem is not structure itself, but when structure becomes more important than people.

 

The answer is not to walk away from the church. The answer is to restore it. The church must return to what it was meant to be. It must be alive, led by the Spirit, and focused on people. It must value truth more than routine. It must care more about reaching others than maintaining systems. It must gather with purpose and go with love.

 

In the end, the church is not defined by where it meets. It is defined by how it lives. It is a people who belong to Jesus. It is a people who stay connected and go out to reach others. It does not wait for people to come. It goes after them. And it is through this obedience that true awakening begins.

 

Because of Him, I Became

Isaiah 51:2 shows us something very simple but very powerful. Abraham was just one man, unknown and ordinary, with no sign of greatness in his life. Then God says, “I blessed him, and made him many.” Abraham did not become something on his own. He became something because God blessed him.

 

This is the truth we often miss. We do not become strong, complete, or full of purpose first. We become those things when God places His blessing on our lives. His blessing is what causes growth. His blessing is what brings increase. His blessing is what turns one into many. Without God’s blessing, we can work hard and achieve things, but it will always be limited. It may look good on the outside, but it will not reach its full purpose. When God blesses a person, something changes. There is strength where there was weakness, direction where there was confusion, and peace where there was striving. We become more because He is with us.

 

God can bless anyone, rich or poor, because His blessing is not based on what a person has. It is based on His presence in their life. A person can have everything this world offers and still have no peace, while another may have very little yet walk closely with God and have deep peace and purpose. That is what it means to be truly blessed. God does bless us here on earth. He provides what we need, opens doors, and gives us strength and peace for each day. These are real blessings, and we should be thankful for them, but they are not the whole story.

 

The greater part of God’s blessing is not found here. It is eternal. Everything in this life will pass away, but what God gives will never fade. The greatest blessing is to belong to Him, to walk with Him, and to have the promise of eternal life. What we experience now is only a small part of what is still to come, and that is why our hope is not in what we see, but in who He is.

 

This is where a blessed life is truly seen. It is seen in what God grows inside of us. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control are not things we create on our own. They are the fruit of His Spirit living in us. They are the evidence that His blessing is real, not just around us, but within us.

 

This becomes most clear in the hardest seasons of life. In the loss of a loved one, His blessing is His presence holding you together. In sickness, it is the strength and peace He gives each day. In the loss of work, it is the faith to trust Him and keep moving forward. The situation may not feel like a blessing, but God is still there, and He is still working.

 

Because of Him, I became. I was not strong, but He gave me strength. I was lost, but He gave me direction. I was not whole, but He began to shape me into something new. This did not happen because of my effort or my ability, but because His hand was on my life. He called me, brought me into His family, and placed His Spirit within me, and that is where everything changed. I became steady when life was not steady. I found peace when everything around me felt uncertain. I kept going, not because I am strong, but because He lives in me.

 

This is what it means to be blessed and highly favored. It is not about what I have, but about who is with me and who is in me. God’s blessing is His presence, and when His Spirit lives in you, your life will change. Abraham became because God blessed him, and the same is true for us. When God places His hand on your life, you will grow, you will endure, and you will become exactly who you were meant to be. Because of Him, we become, and we are still becoming.