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 Cross or Comparison: What Kind of Disciple Are You?

My quiet time this morning was in Luke 14:26–35, and the Word did not just encourage me, I was confronted.

 

Jesus makes it unmistakably clear that following Him is not casual, comfortable, or convenient. It is not adding Him into an already full life, it is handing Him the keys to everything.

 

A disciple is not just someone who believes in Jesus. A disciple is someone who follows Him, learns from Him, submits to Him, and is being changed by Him. This is not a higher level of Christianity. This is what every true believer is. You do not get saved and then later decide to become a disciple. When you are truly saved, you are a disciple from the very beginning, but like a newborn, you are just starting to grow into what that means.

 

 

Jesus is not separating saved people from disciples as if they are two different groups. He is revealing the difference between real faith and superficial faith. Real faith follows. Real faith surrenders. Not perfectly and not all at once, but genuinely over time.

Salvation is still by grace through faith alone. We are not saved because we gave up everything. We are saved because of what Christ has done. But when that faith is real, it does not stay the same. It begins to change us. It loosens our grip on things. It leads us into surrender. So the real question is not whether I have reached some level of surrender, but whether my heart is moving toward Jesus or quietly resisting Him.

 

Jesus also said the kingdom is like a mustard seed. It starts small, almost unnoticeable, but it grows. That is what real faith looks like. It may begin small and fragile, but if it is real, it does not stay that way. It grows, it stretches, and over time it becomes something that changes everything. Discipleship begins at salvation, but it deepens and matures as we walk with Him.

 

And that growth does not mean perfection. Even a true disciple can fall hard. Peter walked with Jesus, declared his faith, and then denied Him three times. In that moment, his words did not reflect belief at all. But his failure was not final. He was broken, restored, and he returned. That is the difference. A real disciple may fall, may struggle, and may even speak in ways that do not reflect faith in a moment of weakness, but they do not stay turned away. Their life comes back to Jesus.

 

But there is another danger that comes with growth, and it is harder to see. The further someone walks with Jesus, the more they can be tempted toward prideful comparison. It can sound like, “I have given up more. I am more disciplined. I am more committed.” And slowly, the focus shifts from Christ to self. That is not maturity. That is drift.

 

Even Paul said, “Follow me as I follow Christ,” not to lift himself above others, but to point people to a life shaped by Jesus. There is a difference between being an example and becoming a judge.

 

Someone who is further along in their walk should not look down on others. They should look back for them. They should remember where they started, how much grace they needed, and how patient God has been with them.

 

Even when someone struggles, even when someone stumbles, even when someone says things that sound like denial of the truth, the response is not judgment. The response is restoration. Because the cross does not place us above people. It places us beside them.

 

Judging others is dangerous because it quietly replaces the cross with comparison. The cross reminds me how much grace I need. Comparison convinces me that someone else needs it more than I do. One leads to humility. The other leads to a hardened heart.

 

The truth is, we are all at different places. Some are just beginning. Some are struggling. Some are growing stronger. But all of us stand on the same ground, and that ground is grace. If I am further along in any way, it is not a reason to look down. It is a responsibility to reach back and help someone else forward.

 

Following Jesus is not about proving anything. It is about surrendering everything.

 

Emotions: A Gift That Must Not Lead

Emotions have been on my mind this morning, especially how quickly they can change. One thought, one piece of information, even a dream can shift everything. You can go to bed feeling secure and wake up feeling unsure, even though nothing has actually changed.

That shows how much emotions are tied to circumstances. They rise and fall based on what is happening around us, what we hear, what we experience, and even what we imagine. Because they come from circumstances, they are always changing. And if something is always changing, it cannot be trusted to lead.

 

Then you add in the attacks of the enemy. The accusations come in quietly, but they feel real. They build on whatever you are already feeling. If circumstances make you feel uncertain, the lie tells you that you are failing. If circumstances make you feel weak, the lie tells you that you are not capable. What started as a reaction to a moment slowly begins to shape how you think and even how you see yourself.

 

The result of this is instability. You begin to question what you know is true. You react instead of thinking clearly. Decisions start being made based on how you feel in the moment instead of what is right. Your confidence rises and falls with your circumstances, and there is no consistency.

 

Emotions will also affect relationships if they are allowed to take control. Words are spoken in the heat of the moment that cannot be taken back. Small issues become larger than they really are. Misunderstandings grow because reactions replace communication. Instead of building trust, emotions slowly begin to break it down, creating distance where there should be unity.

 

But this raises an important question. If emotions can lead to this kind of instability, why did God give them to us in the first place?

 

Emotions are not the problem. They were given by God for a purpose. They allow us to feel love, joy, compassion, conviction, and even sorrow. They help us connect with others, respond to what matters, and recognize when something is right or wrong. In the right place, emotions are a gift. They can draw us closer to God, deepen our relationships, and give weight and meaning to our lives.

 

The problem comes when emotions are allowed to lead instead of follow. What was meant to be a response becomes the authority. What was meant to support truth begins to replace it.

 

This pattern does not just stay personal. It shows up everywhere. In our country, many arguments, especially from the liberal left, seem to be driven more by emotion than by truth and facts. When feelings become the foundation, confusion follows. If you do not agree with the emotional argument, you are often labeled as wrong or ignorant, not because truth has been proven, but because you did not align with how something feels. That leads to division instead of understanding.

 

The same thing happens in churches and in homes. When emotions lead, people react instead of responding with wisdom. Decisions are made in the moment. Leadership becomes inconsistent. What is right one day can feel wrong the next depending on the situation or mood. This creates disorder and instability where there should be clarity and peace.

 

The issue is not that emotions exist. The issue is that emotions, which come from changing circumstances, are being allowed to lead. The solution is to govern emotions instead of being ruled by them. That starts by slowing down and asking a simple question: is this true, or is this just how I feel right now? That pause creates space between emotion and action.

 

It also requires being anchored in what does not change. Truth does not move with circumstances, so it does not shift the way emotions do. When truth leads, emotions begin to settle into their proper place instead of controlling everything.

 

When dealing with emotional people, responding with more emotion only creates more instability. This is where discipline matters. Do not get pulled into the moment. Stay steady, stay clear, and stay grounded. As a reminder, do not let someone else’s emotions control your response—respond with truth, not reaction. Over time, that consistency brings clarity and exposes what is unstable.

 

In the end, the pattern is clear. When emotions lead, the result is confusion, division, instability, and broken relationships. When truth leads, the result is clarity, unity, stability, and peace. The choice is simple. Be led by what changes or be anchored in what does not.

A Nation at a Crossroads: Responsibility or Dependence

America does not lose its strength all at once—it loses it step by step through the choices it makes over time. When a nation continues to spend more than it earns, continues to take on debt, and continues to print money to sustain its way of life, it slowly weakens the very foundation that once made it strong. At first, nothing seems wrong. Life goes on. But underneath, something critical is changing: the value of the dollar and the trust behind it.

 

At the same time, the mindset of the nation begins to shift. Instead of individuals, families, and communities carrying responsibility, more is handed over to government. People begin to rely on systems to provide what they once worked, planned, and sacrificed for themselves. It feels easier. It feels safer. But over time, it creates dependence.

 

The problem is simple: government cannot give what it does not first take or borrow. And when it borrows too much, it eventually turns to printing more money to survive. That weakens every dollar in circulation. It doesn’t happen overnight—but over time, everything costs more, and your money does less.

 

The rest of the world sees this. Other nations begin to lose confidence. They slowly reduce their reliance on the dollar, build alternative systems, and protect themselves from what they see coming. What took decades to build—trust—begins to erode. And once enough of that trust is gone, the shift happens. The dollar is no longer the center of the global economy.

 

That’s when life changes for the average American.

 

Prices don’t just rise—they stay high. Groceries, gas, housing, and everyday essentials take more of your paycheck. Borrowing becomes expensive. Credit cards, mortgages, and loans carry heavy interest. Wages may increase, but not enough to keep up. It begins to feel like you’re working just as hard but falling behind.

 

Spending habits change because they have to. Families cut back. Plans are delayed. The margin that once existed disappears. Financial pressure becomes a constant part of life.

 

But beneath the economic shift is something deeper.

 

As people become more dependent on centralized systems, those systems gain more control. What once provided help begins to set the rules. Access—to money, to resources, to basic needs—can increasingly be managed, tracked, and limited.

 

The Bible warns about a future like this.

 

Revelation 13:16–17 describes a time when no one can buy or sell unless they have a mark. This points to a system where economic participation is tied to compliance—where access to daily life is no longer free but controlled.

 

That kind of system does not appear suddenly. It grows out of a world where money is centralized, where people are dependent, and where control over transactions already exists.

 

This is not about fear—it is about direction.

 

A nation that chooses responsibility, discipline, and stewardship builds strength and freedom. A nation that chooses dependence, excess, and centralized control moves toward weakness and restriction.

 

The loss of the dollar’s dominance is not just an economic event—it is a warning sign. It shows what happens when a country drifts too far from the principles that once sustained it.

 

What lies ahead is not collapse, but a steady tightening. Higher costs. Less margin. More control.

 

And the path forward remains a choice.

The Quiet Trade

I have lived long enough to watch things change. Not all at once, and not in ways that draw attention right away, but slowly and quietly over time. It is the kind of change that happens beneath the surface, where most people do not notice until much later. And in these later years, I find myself reflecting more, asking questions that only come with time and perspective. One question has stayed with me: how does a free people begin to lose what they once had?

 

It does not happen with chains or force. It happens with comfort. I remember a time when most things in life were not given, they were pursued. A man worked for what he had, and there was dignity in that work. If he wanted a home, he labored for it. If he wanted to provide for his family, he accepted that responsibility fully. Nothing was promised, and nothing was owed. It was understood that life, liberty, and happiness were not guarantees, but rights to be pursued. That word carried weight because it required effort, discipline, and perseverance.

 

Today, I look around and see a different mindset taking hold. I see a generation being shaped to believe that what others worked for should be provided to them. Stability is expected without the same level of sacrifice. Comfort is offered without the same level of responsibility. And I understand how easy it is to accept that. When life becomes easier, when burdens are lifted, it feels like progress. It feels like help. But there is a line, and when that line is crossed, something begins to change within a person.

 

When a man no longer has to pursue, he begins to expect. And when expectation replaces pursuit, dependence is not far behind. This is not something that happens overnight. It happens little by little, through small decisions and subtle shifts in thinking. It happens when people begin to choose comfort over responsibility, again and again, until it becomes normal.

 

I have also watched a change in the kind of strength that once defined men. There was a time when strength was steady and dependable, not loud or demanding, but firm and rooted. Men knew who they were, and they understood their role. They carried responsibility without needing recognition. Today, that kind of strength is often questioned or diminished, leaving many uncertain of who they are meant to be. When the foundation of a man is weakened, the strength of a nation begins to weaken with it.

 

I do not say these things out of anger. I say them from years of watching, from remembering what was, and from recognizing what is slowly becoming. Freedom is not usually taken all at once. More often, it is traded away, piece by piece, in exchange for comfort. And most people do not realize what they have given up until it is already gone.

 

“When a people begin to exchange their liberty for comfort and security, and are sustained by what is taken from themselves, freedom does not vanish suddenly—it is slowly surrendered.”

 

So I find myself thinking more these days, hoping that others will pause and look around with clear eyes. Not just at what is being offered, but at what it may be costing. Because the direction a people move, even slowly, always leads somewhere. And I have lived long enough to know that if we stop pursuing, if we continue choosing comfort over responsibility, we may one day find ourselves in a place we never intended to be.

 

Not Retiring – But Being Refining

This morning, I found myself slowing down, reflecting, and praying about where I stand in this season of life. It is a time when many step away, when they begin to lay things down after years of labor, looking forward to rest and the freedom to do what was once postponed. I understand that season, and I could easily step into it. I do not have to work. I am not driven by necessity, pressure, or obligation.

 

And yet, I continue.

 

Because what I am doing no longer feels like work. Somewhere along this journey, something changed within me. God shifted my understanding. What was once effort has become calling. What once required strength now gives strength. I am no longer working to build something for myself. I am walking in something that God is building through me.

 

There is a difference, and it is unmistakable.

 

When a man truly walks with God, it becomes evident, not in what he says, but in how he lives. There is a weight to his life. There is a steadiness in his decisions. There is a peace that does not shake when circumstances do. People begin to notice, not because anything is being forced, but because the presence of God reveals itself over time through a life surrendered to Him.

 

It does not mean I have achieved perfection. Far from it. I still stumble. I still fall. But what I have found is this: when I fall, Jesus is the One who lifts me up. Not with judgment, not with condemnation, but with mercy and encouragement. He steadies me, reminds me who I am, and calls me forward again. That changes a man. That builds something deeper than strength. It builds trust.

 

People who have known you, worked with you, and walked through life alongside you begin to recognize that difference. Not in words, but in results. In consistency. In how you respond when things go wrong. In how you carry yourself when no one is watching. And in time, they come, not asking for what you know, but asking for your help. What they are really responding to, whether they can explain it or not, is that God is with you.

 

Life has not become easier. There are still unknowns, still responsibilities, still challenges ahead. But there is a clarity now, a strength that does not come from me. I am not striving to find purpose. I am walking in it.

 

And I am grateful.

 

Thank You, Lord, that I am not finished, but still being shaped. Thank You that this is not a season of stepping away, but a season of stepping deeper into what You have called me to do. Thank You that I no longer work out of need, but out of obedience. That what once felt like work has become a joy, a purpose, and a calling.

 

There is a quiet authority in this season. A confidence that is not loud, but unshakable. It is the confidence of a man who knows he is walking with God.

 

And when a man walks with God, he does not have to convince anyone. His life shows it.

The Difference Is Distance

“And they were on the road, going up to Jerusalem, and Jesus was walking ahead of them. And they were amazed, and those who followed were afraid.” (Mark 10:32)

 

They were all on the same road, walking toward the same city, following the same Jesus. But the experience was not the same for everyone. Jesus was out in front, leading with purpose, fully aware that Jerusalem meant suffering, rejection, and the cross. He did not slow down or hesitate. There was something in the way He walked—steady, resolved, unshaken—that caused those closest to Him to be amazed. The disciples felt the weight of what was ahead, but being near Him changed how they carried it.

 

As they walked, Jesus spoke plainly to them about what was coming. “See, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be delivered… and they will mock Him and spit on Him… and after three days He will rise.” (Mark 10:33–34). They did not fully understand His words, but they heard them. They stayed close enough to listen, close enough to see His face, close enough to recognize that even though the road was hard, He was not afraid. That nearness did not remove their fear, but it kept their fear from taking over. Awe and fear existed together, but awe had the greater weight because of who He was.

 

Further behind were others following at a distance. They were still on the road, still moving in the same direction, but they were not close enough to hear His voice or see Him clearly. They could sense the tension, the danger, the uncertainty of where this road was leading, but they did not have the same clarity. Scripture simply says they were afraid. Without hearing His words, without seeing His steadiness, fear filled the space where understanding should have been.

 

This is not just a moment in their story—it is a picture of ours. There are seasons where following Jesus leads straight into difficulty, not away from it. “In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33). Fear in those moments is not failure; it is human. But there is a difference between walking with fear while staying close to Jesus and walking in fear at a distance from Him.

 

When you stay near Him—when His Word is open, when His voice is familiar, when your life is aligned with His presence—you begin to see what they saw. He is still leading. He is not shaken. He already knows what is ahead. “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me.” (Psalm 23:4). His presence does not always remove the valley, but it changes how you walk through it.

 

But when distance grows—when His voice becomes faint and His presence feels far—fear begins to stand on its own. It gets louder, heavier, and more controlling. The road has not changed, but your perspective has. What was once held together by trust becomes dominated by uncertainty.

 

So the question is not whether you are facing something difficult. The road to Jerusalem reminds us that following Jesus often includes hard places. The question is whether you are walking close enough to Him that, even in your fear, you can still hear His voice and trust where He is leading.

 

“Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God.” (Isaiah 41:10)

 

Known by God – Not Judged by Man

There is a great desire within all people to be seen, valued, and accepted, yet from the beginning, humanity has looked to one another for that acceptance instead of looking to God. People measure themselves against others, building their worth on opinions, appearance, and approval, even though no person has ever been given the authority to define another’s value. That authority belongs to the Lord alone, yet people continue to compare, and as Paul warns, this is foolish, because to measure ourselves by ourselves is to miss the truth. Human standards are limited, shifting, and often wrong, yet they are used every day to decide who is worthy and who is not.

 

This becomes even more dangerous in the church, where sincere people pursuing righteousness can slowly become the standard for others. What begins as a genuine walk with God can turn into an unspoken expectation placed on everyone else, and what was meant to be a place of grace becomes a place of pressure. People are no longer simply led to God; they are measured against people, and it becomes easier to say, “Yes Lord, You are right,” while quietly thinking, “but look at them.” In that moment, the focus shifts from surrender to comparison, and the heart drifts from humility into judgment.

 

This pattern is not new, as it is seen clearly in the story of Job. His friends came with confidence, believing they understood how God worked, and they judged Job according to their own understanding, convinced that suffering must mean failure. Yet they were wrong. They spoke as if they defended truth, but they misrepresented God and added weight to a man already crushed, judging by a standard that seemed right to them but was incomplete. In the end, God Himself rebuked them, revealing that human judgment, even when it sounds spiritual, can still be far from His heart.

 

The church was never meant to function this way, but was established as a place of worship, teaching, instruction, and help, where people are built up and drawn closer to God. Scripture calls for edification, not comparison, and while there are times when open, unrepentant sin must be addressed, even to the point of separation for a season, it is always for the purpose of restoration, never condemnation. There is a clear difference between loving correction and self-appointed judgment, and confusing the two has caused deep harm within the body.

 

God does not deal with people the way people deal with people, because He deals with each of us personally, patiently, and completely. While we are quick to look outward, He is always working inward, addressing the heart rather than the appearance. It is far easier to point at others than to surrender ourselves, yet as it has often been said, “When you point one finger at someone else, there are three pointing back at you,” and this reveals how easily judgment blinds us to our own need for grace.

 

When a person comes to God, they are not met with comparison, rejection, or a demand to measure up, but with grace. He does not require perfection before acceptance, but receives people as they are and begins His work within them, patiently shaping, correcting, and restoring over time. He sees the heart, the struggle, and the desire, and He responds with mercy, not condemnation, because He is not looking for those who have already perfected themselves, but for those who will come to Him in humility.

 

As A.W. Tozer once said, “God is not looking for men of great faith, but for individuals ready to follow Him.” This is the difference between man’s system and God’s heart, because man measures, compares, and judges, but God calls, receives, and transforms.

 

And this is the truth that must remain unshaken: God does not receive people based on how they compare to others, but on their willingness to come to Him. Those who come to Him humbly will never be turned away, never be measured by human standards, and never be rejected for where they are in the process. He alone defines their worth, He alone directs their growth, and He alone is faithful to complete the work He begins.

 

Where Contentment Is Really Found

The book of Job has never been one I’m naturally drawn to, because it refuses to soften the reality of suffering. It brings you face to face with loss, confusion, and the kind of pain that doesn’t come with easy answers. But if you stay with it—if you follow Job all the way through—you begin to see that the story is not just about what he lost, but about what he learned. Job is not the same man at the end of the book as he was at the beginning. And that difference is where the meaning of contentment is revealed.

 

At the beginning, Job is blessed—his life is full, his wealth is great, his standing is strong. By the world’s definition, he has every reason to be content. And in many ways, he is. But his contentment is still tied to what surrounds him. Then everything is stripped away. His possessions, his security, his understanding—it all collapses. And in that place, the question becomes unavoidable: what is contentment when everything outward is gone?

 

This is where the shift begins.

 

Because suffering exposes the foundation we are truly standing on. The world teaches that contentment is outward—it is measured by what we have, what we achieve, and how comfortable our lives are. But Job’s story dismantles that idea. When all of that is taken, what remains is not what he owns, but who he trusts. Through loss, Job moves from simply knowing about God to truly encountering Him.

 

And at the end, everything comes into focus.

 

After the pain, the questions, and the silence, Job is brought to a place where he must release what he has been carrying. Not just his confusion—but his wounds. He prays for the very friends who misjudged him, who added to his suffering. And it is in that moment of forgiveness that everything changes. Not just his circumstances—but his heart. Because suffering may break us, but forgiveness is what frees us.

 

You cannot live in true contentment while holding onto what hurt you. Bitterness ties your peace to your pain. But forgiveness releases you from it. It is not about excusing what happened—it is about refusing to let it define you. Job had lost everything, but the final step of his restoration was not getting it back—it was letting it go. And in that release, he stepped into a deeper wholeness than he had ever known before.

 

So what is contentment?

 

It is not outward. It is not found in abundance, success, or comfort. Those things can come and go. True contentment is inward—it is a life aligned with God, a heart that trusts Him in loss as much as in blessing, and a spirit that is free because it has learned to forgive.

 

Job was rich at the beginning, and he was rich at the end—but only at the end was he truly free.

 

And that is where contentment is really found.

 

NOT TIME – BUT DESIGN

Last night was long and restless. Sleep wouldn’t come, and the pain in my gallbladder made sure I felt every minute of it. Lying there in the quiet, with nothing to distract me, my mind drifted to my body—not the parts I can see, but the ones I never think about. The hidden places. The silent work happening inside me. In that moment, David’s words felt real in a way I couldn’t ignore: I am fearfully and wonderfully made.

 

I began thinking about the organs quietly doing their work. The gallbladder, small and tucked away, still serving a purpose. The liver, constantly filtering and sustaining life without ever being noticed. My heart beating on its own, steady and faithful. My lungs drawing breath in and out, again and again, without effort or command. What struck me most was how the parts I never see are the very things keeping me alive.

 

Then the realization deepened. Some parts of my body I could lose and still live, though life would be different. But others I could not live without for more than moments. And even those do not function alone. The heart needs blood. Blood needs oxygen. Oxygen requires lungs. And the lungs depend on the air around me. Nothing works in isolation. Life exists because everything is connected and working together at the same time.

 

That truth extends beyond my body. Even if everything inside me worked perfectly, I still could not survive on my own. I need air, water, and food—and not eventually, but immediately. Within minutes, I need air. Within days, water. Within weeks, food. That means everything necessary for my survival had to already be here, already in place, already sustaining life before I ever took my first breath.

 

The same pattern appears in the continuation of life. One person alone is not enough. Life requires both male and female—distinct, complementary, and designed to come together and produce life. Not later, not gradually, but together and in place. And this is where the weight of it settles in. It is not just that a body must exist with fully functioning organs, but that at the same time there must also be another person, equally formed, equally capable, and perfectly complementary. To believe that all of this came together by chance—that organs formed, systems aligned, and even a mate existed at just the right moment—does not hold. It requires everything necessary for life to arrive at once, in the right condition, without direction or purpose. But everything I was seeing, even in my own body, pointed somewhere else.

 

Lying there in the dark, one truth became impossible to ignore. I am not in control. I am not making my heart beat. I am not telling my lungs to breathe. I am not sustaining my own life. And everything I depend on outside of me is already here, holding me up moment by moment. The pain slowed me down enough to notice what I usually overlook, and what I saw was not randomness, but order—intentional, precise, and complete.

 

And in that stillness, the conclusion was no longer abstract—it was unavoidable. Life does not explain itself; time does not organize itself, and chance does not sustain itself. Everything I depend on, both within me and around me, points to one answer: creation. Not a process still trying to work, but a work already finished; not something becoming, but something spoken into being. I am not just alive—I am being sustained. Every breath I take is upheld, every heartbeat continues because it is allowed to, and the order I see all around me is not standing on its own. It is held together by my Savior. Jesus Christ is the reason it continues. And as I lay there in the dark, feeling every moment, one truth stood above all the rest: creation is not just the best explanation—it is the only one.

 

More Than Words

This morning in my quiet time, I opened my Bible and found myself in Luke 11. As I read the disciples asking, “Lord, teach us to pray,” something in me slowed down. It wasn’t just their question anymore—it became mine. Not how to say the right words, but what prayer actually looks like when it is real.

 

As I sat there, my mind began to move through the prayers scattered throughout Scripture—not teachings about prayer, but real moments. David in the wilderness, worn down and honest, asking, “How long, O Lord?” Hannah, broken and silent, pouring out her heart. Solomon asking for wisdom when he knew he wasn’t enough. Jesus in the garden, carrying weight no one else could carry, yet still saying, “Not my will, but Yours be done.” And the tax collector, with nothing to offer but honesty, “God, have mercy on me.” None of them sounded the same, but all of them were real, and what stood out wasn’t just what they said, but who they were saying it to. They weren’t reaching for someone distant. They were speaking to Someone they knew.

 

And that’s where it became clear—prayer doesn’t start when you sit down. It starts with relationship. It starts with the reality that you are not walking through life alone. God is not someone you go to at certain times—He is Someone who is already with you. He is there in the quiet, in the pressure, in the middle of your thoughts, in the moments no one else sees. Prayer is not stepping into His presence; it is realizing you’ve never stepped out of it.

 

The longer you walk with Him, the more that begins to change everything. At first, prayer can feel like something you’re trying to do right. You think about your words, you wonder if you’re saying enough, and sometimes you don’t know where to start. But as life unfolds—through things you’ve faced, things you’ve failed in, and things He’s carried you through—you begin to recognize Him differently. Not as someone far off, but as Someone who has been right there the whole time. You remember the moments He sustained you, the times He corrected you, and the times He didn’t leave even when you pulled away. And slowly, without forcing it, you stop “going to pray” and start talking to Him as you walk.

 

It begins to happen in real time, woven into the middle of your day. In a passing thought, in a moment of frustration, while driving, working, or sitting in silence, you find yourself speaking to Him—not because it’s scheduled, but because He’s there. And just as real, there are moments you don’t say anything at all, but you are aware of Him with you. Prayer is no longer something you step into; it becomes something you live in.

 

Over time, it becomes less about form and more about reality. Not less meaningful, but more honest. The words may become simpler, sometimes fewer, but the connection runs deeper because it has been shaped by everything you’ve walked through with Him. The trust is no longer borrowed—it is built. The honesty is no longer forced—it is natural. You are no longer trying to approach God correctly; you are walking with your Savior continually.

 

As I sat there, one thought stayed with me, steady and undeniable: “The depth of your prayer will never exceed the depth of your relationship with Him.” And the longer I’ve walked with Him, the more I’ve come to understand that prayer is not something I try to do right, and it’s not something I prepare for—it’s simply me talking with Him. Not as someone distant, but as someone who has been with me through everything. Through the good, the failures, the doubts, the times I didn’t even want to come—He was still there. And because of that, prayer to me is no longer a moment I set aside, it’s a conversation I return to. I’m not thinking about how I sound or whether I’m saying enough. I’m just talking to Him like I would a friend who knows me completely, who doesn’t judge me for how I come or where I am when I come, but is always there, and over time, I’ve found that I don’t just go to Him when I need something—I actually long for those conversations.