Word Study: Disciple

In Gospel of Mark 3:13โ€“14, we see something powerful about what it means to follow Jesus: He calls, and then He draws near. โ€œHe appointed twelveโ€ฆ so that they might be with Him and He might send them out to preach.โ€

Before anything elseโ€”before ministry, impact, or influenceโ€”there was presence. They were chosen to be with Him.

The word โ€œdiscipleโ€ comes from the Greek mathetes, meaning learner or studentโ€”someone shaped not just by what a teacher says, but by how they live. Interestingly, while followers of Jesus are called โ€œChristiansโ€ only a few times and โ€œbelieversโ€ a bit more, the word disciple appears over 200 times in Scripture. That repetition matters.

Key verses include: Matthew 28:19, John 8:31, Luke 14:27

Strongโ€™s Number: G3101

A disciple isnโ€™t just someone who believesโ€”itโ€™s someone who follows closely, learns deeply, and is formed daily.

And hereโ€™s the tension: we are all being discipled by something. What we give our time, attention, and affection to is quietly shaping who we become.

Jesus shows us the order clearly:
proximity comes before productivity.

So the question isnโ€™t just what are you doing for Christ?
Itโ€™s are you with Him?

What might it look like today to sit with Him a little longer, listen a little closer, and follow a little more intentionally?

Thatโ€™s where true discipleship begins.

Strength in the Struggle: Trusting God in the Tension

There is a tension every Christian must learn to live inโ€”the space where strength and struggle coexist. Itโ€™s not a clean, polished place. Itโ€™s messy. Itโ€™s exhausting. And often, it feels like there is very little comfort in the circumstances themselves.

Psalm 27 speaks directly into that tension.

It is a psalm of contrastโ€”lament and confidence, persecution and praise, warfare and worship. David doesnโ€™t present a neat, resolved faith. Instead, he invites us into an honest, layered conversation with God. In fact, throughout the psalm, David engages in three distinct conversations: he speaks about God with confidence, he cries out to God in desperation, and he ultimately speaks to himself with chosen faith.

The psalm begins with bold declaration:

โ€œThe Lord is my light and my salvationโ€”whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my lifeโ€”of whom shall I be afraid?โ€

This is Davidโ€™s foundation. Before he addresses his circumstances, he anchors himself in who God is. His identity is rooted in God as his light, his salvation, and his stronghold. And that identityโ€”claimed before the stormโ€”becomes the source of his courage within it.

Verses 1โ€“6 reveal a conversation of confidence. Even with enemies surrounding him, David declares that his heart will not fear. Why? Because his โ€œone thingโ€ is clear: to dwell in the presence of the Lord, to seek Him, to gaze upon His beauty. This pursuit becomes the stabilizing force in the chaos. Seeking God first, before trying to fix everything else, is what leads to a faithful lifeโ€”and ultimately, where true comfort is found.

But the tone shifts.

In verses 7โ€“12, David cries out. This is no longer confident proclamation; this is raw, vulnerable pleading:

โ€œHear me, Lord, when I cry aloudโ€ฆ do not hide your face from meโ€ฆ do not forsake me.โ€

Here, we see desperation. Honest, unfiltered need. David brings his fears, his pain, and even his sense of abandonment before God. He doesnโ€™t pretend to be okay. He prays Scripture back to God, recalls His character, and asks Him to act.

And then, in verses 13โ€“14, something powerful happens. David speaks to himself:

โ€œI believe that I shall look upon the goodness of the Lord in the land of the livingโ€ฆ Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord.โ€

This is chosen faith.

Not because everything has changedโ€”but because he chooses to trust that God will show up. The word โ€œwaitโ€ here isnโ€™t passive. It means a hopeful, eager, patient expectation. It is active trust in the โ€œin-between.โ€

This is the tension: desperation and confidence, struggle and strength, all at once.

And if Iโ€™m honest, this week, I didnโ€™t handle that tension very well.

Normally, I thrive in a busy schedule. But this week felt different. I was tired in a deeper wayโ€”the kind that comes from pouring out more than Iโ€™ve been filling back up. My quiet times havenโ€™t been quiet. My workload is the heaviest itโ€™s been in years, with over 70 children and families Iโ€™m trying to serve within a deeply broken foster care system. Grant writing, grocery shopping, meal preppingโ€ฆ. The list is long.

On top of that, my mom has had ongoing medical appointments. Thursdays is a day when my office is supposed to be closed and whatโ€™s supposed to be a day of rest has turned into a full day of caregiving, emotional support, and work responsibilities. Itโ€™s been a lot to carry.

The day looked liked this:

Early morningโ€”meal prepping, feeding fish, frogs, cats, and dogs.
Loving on my sweet boy after another rough night.
Praying with him. Opening the Word togetherโ€ฆ while trying to find a few quiet moments in it for myself.

Then itโ€™s go timeโ€”
Getting ready, rushing out the door, navigating appointments, questions, waiting roomsโ€ฆ
If you know, you know.

Back home for a quick lunch.
Let the animals out.
Sit with Jackson, help with school, breathe for a second.

Then log into courtโ€”
Case after case, report after report, heavy stories, real lives.
Two, sometimes three hearings back-to-back.

And just like that, the clock resetsโ€”
45 minutes (if Iโ€™m lucky)โ€ฆ
Dinner. Sunshine. Evening routine.
Animals again. Wind down. Repeat.

And somehow, it all came to a head over something smallโ€”a grumpy cat with a bad attitude and a misplaced mess. In a moment, everything bubbling beneath the surface spilled out. I reacted in frustration, raising my voice, taking it out on the animals around me.

It wasnโ€™t my best moment.

But it was a revealing one.

In that moment, I realized how much I needed help. Not just practicallyโ€”but spiritually. I started looking into support services for my mom (and Iโ€™m still waiting on those doors to open), and her heart to soften, but more than anything, I knew I needed to return to the presence of the Lord.

Earlier that same day, I had felt prompted to step away from my study in Titus and read Psalm 27. At the time, it felt like a beautiful passageโ€”but I didnโ€™t sit with it deeply.

After my breakdown, I came back to it.

And this time, I saw it differently.

I saw the tension. I saw the honesty. I saw the way David held both struggle and faith at the same time. And I felt humbled. Because what Iโ€™m walking through, as heavy as it feels, pales in comparison to what David enduredโ€”and yet, he still chose to trust.

Scripture is full of this โ€œin-betweenโ€ waiting:

  • Abraham and Sarah waiting for a promised child
  • Joseph waiting in prison for Godโ€™s plan to unfold
  • Hannah waiting in anguish before her prayer was answered
  • David himself, anointed king but not yet crowned

These stories remind us that waiting is not wasted. God works in the tension.

And even more comfortingโ€”God understands the tension.

We are not walking through this alone. We have a Savior who stepped into humanity, who experienced struggle, temptation, exhaustion, and sorrow. He knows what it is to live in the โ€œin-between.โ€ He meets us there with compassion, not condemnation.

So when we failโ€”when we lose our patience, when we react instead of respond, when we feel overwhelmedโ€”we donโ€™t have to run away from God.

We run toward Him.

We return to His presence.

We remind ourselves of who He is.

And we choose, again, to believe:

That we will see His goodness.
That He is still working.
That He can be trusted in every season.

So today, Iโ€™m praying this:

Lord, help me not to walk in condemnation, but in the freedom You provide.
Teach me to seek Your face above everything else.
Strengthen my heart to believe that I will see Your goodnessโ€”even here, even now.
Help me to wait with hope, with courage, and with trust.

Because this is where faith is formedโ€”not outside the tension, but right in the middle of it.

Photo by dalia nava on Pexels.com

He Called My Name โ€” From Wilderness to Freedom

There was a version of me that was always searching.

Searching for peace.
Searching for quiet.
Searching for somethingโ€”anythingโ€”to numb the ache I couldnโ€™t explain.

I tried to silence it the only ways I knew howโ€ฆ in a bottle of whiskey, in pills, in relationships that promised comfort but left me emptier than before. I wasnโ€™t just making bad choicesโ€”I was running. Running from pain. Running from memories. Running from the deep, hollow place inside me that nothing in this world could fill.

On the outside, I could smile. I could function. I could blend in.

But inside?
I was lost in a wilderness.


Seen in the Wilderness

Thereโ€™s a story in Scripture that I had often read, but read it quickly and did not study it to really understand what was transpiring – until my own journey sort of forced me to. It forced me to ask the question: Where is God when I am hurting?

In Genesis, Hagar finds herself aloneโ€”used, rejected, cast out, and wandering in the desert with nothing but her pain and her child. And in that place, when she had nothing left, God met her.

โ€œThe angel of the Lord found her by a spring of water in the wildernessโ€ฆโ€ โ€” Genesis 16:7

He didnโ€™t wait for her to find her way back.
He went to her.

And He called her by name.

Hagar responded by giving God a name of her own:

โ€œYou are the God who sees me.โ€ โ€” Genesis 16:13

Thatโ€™s the God I met too.


The Moment Everything Changed

I remember the moment.

Not polished. Not perfect. Not planned.

But real.

I heard Him call my nameโ€”not audibly, but unmistakably. It cut through the chaos, through the lies, through the numbness. And for the first time, I realizedโ€ฆ He had always seen me.

Not the version I pretended to be.
Not the broken choices I tried to hide behind.

Me.

And in that moment, I had a choice:
Keep runningโ€ฆ or respond.

When I respondedโ€”everything changed.

Not overnight. Not magically. But deeply. Eternally.

The suffering that once felt meaningless suddenly made sense in light of the cross.

โ€œFor the joy set before Him He endured the crossโ€ฆโ€ โ€” Hebrews 12:2

Jesus endured suffering so that mine wouldnโ€™t be wasted.
So that my story could be redeemed.
So that I could be free.


What Freedom Looks Like Now

Today, I am not who I used to be.

By the grace of God, Iโ€™ve been sober for years.
Not by my own strengthโ€”but by His.

Now I sit across from familiesโ€”parents who are walking paths I once walked. I advocate for foster children who have endured unimaginable abuse. I step into broken places, not as someone who has it all together, but as someone who has been rescued.

And sometimesโ€ฆ the old voices try to come back.

โ€œWho do you think you are?โ€
โ€œYouโ€™re no different.โ€
โ€œYouโ€™re not worthy of this work.โ€

But those voices donโ€™t get the final say anymore.

Because now, I hear a different voice.

โ€œTherefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.โ€ โ€” 2 Corinthians 5:17

The voice of my King is louder.
The voice of my Savior is stronger.

And where His Spirit isโ€”

โ€œNow the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.โ€ โ€” 2 Corinthians 3:17


This Is My Call to You

Maybe youโ€™re reading this and you recognize yourself in my โ€œbefore.โ€

The searching.
The numbing.
The exhaustion of trying to outrun whatโ€™s inside.

Let me tell you something in love and truth:

You donโ€™t have to stay there.

God sees youโ€”right where you are.
In your wilderness.
In your pain.
In your questions.

And He is calling your name.

The same Jesus who met me is calling youโ€”not to shame you, but to save you.

โ€œRepent therefore, and turn back, that your sins may be blotted out.โ€ โ€” Acts 3:19

Repent. Turn. Come to Him.

Not when you โ€œfix yourself.โ€
Not when you feel worthy.

Today.

โ€œBehold, now is the favorable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.โ€ โ€” 2 Corinthians 6:2

Lay it down. The sin. The striving. The pain.
Believe in the One who endured the cross for you.

He will meet you there.

And I promise youโ€”
the freedom on the other side is real.


My God is the God of Redemption.

Lost in addiction – experiencing the wilderness.
Free in Christ! Found and Redeemed!

I canโ€™t seem to move past Titus 2:3โ€“5 latelyโ€ฆ itโ€™s been sitting heavy on my heart in the best way.

Paulโ€™s words to women feel both tender and weighty: teach what is good, live what is holy.

One phrase especially stopped meโ€”โ€œnot slanderers.โ€

The word we translate as โ€œslanderersโ€ here is actually the same Greek word for โ€œdevilโ€ or โ€œsatan โ€. That means when we speak maliciously, gossip, or tear one another down, it isnโ€™t small talkโ€ฆ itโ€™s aligning our words with the enemy. Literally devilish speech!

That alone is enough to make me pause before I speak.

Paul also calls women to be diligentโ€”workers at home. Not confined, not limited, but purposeful. We see this beautifully in Proverbs 31โ€”a woman who works both inside and outside her home. The heart behind it isnโ€™t restriction, itโ€™s a warning against idleness and a call to live intentionally.

There is something deeply holy about caring for a home, nurturing a family, and creating a place of peace in a chaotic world. Culture may downplay it, but Scripture lifts it up.

And submission? Itโ€™s not about inferiorityโ€”itโ€™s about humility, order, and reflecting Christ in how we love and serve. Itโ€™s strength under control, not weakness.

In a world that celebrates independence at all costs, this kind of life can feel countercultural. But maybe thatโ€™s the point.

Because at the end of the day, this isnโ€™t about rolesโ€”itโ€™s about representation.

How we speak.

How we love.

How we serve.

How we carry ourselves in the unseen, ordinary moments.

All of it is pointing to something greater.

Lord, help meโ€”and every woman reading thisโ€”to be a faithful ambassador of the gospel today. That matters more than anything.

The Woman God Honors: A Quiet Strength in a Loud World

There has always been a cultural narrative telling women who they should be.

In our world today, it often sounds like this: Be louder. Be independent at all costs. Put yourself first. Define your own truth. Donโ€™t let anythingโ€”or anyoneโ€”limit you.

But this isnโ€™t new.

Long before modern feminism took center stage, there was another movement shaping the identity of womenโ€”one that looked strikingly similar.

A Look Back: The โ€œNew Roman Womanโ€

In the days of Paul the Apostle, a cultural shift was taking place across the Roman Empire. Scholars often refer to it as the rise of the โ€œnew Roman woman.โ€

Wealthy women were gaining social and financial independence. With that freedom, many began to step outside the traditional structure of family lifeโ€”not simply to contribute, but often to abandon it altogether. Some pursued multiple sexual relationships. Others avoided marriage entirely. Still others sought influence in public spaces while neglecting the responsibilities within their own homes.

This movement grew so prominent that Augustus himself enacted laws to try to slow the moral and familial decline. Birth rates were falling. Marriages were weakening. The foundation of the family was beginning to crack.

Sound familiar?

Paulโ€™s Response: A Different Kind of Freedom

When Paul wrote to Titus, he wasnโ€™t giving random instructionsโ€”he was offering a God-centered response to a culture in confusion.

In his Epistle to Titus, particularly in chapter 2, Paul outlines a vision for women that stands in stark contrast to both the ancient Roman movement and much of what we see today.

3ย Older women likewise are to be reverent in behavior,ย not slanderersย or slaves to much wine. They are to teach what is good,ย 4ย and so train the young women to love their husbands and children,ย 5ย to be self-controlled,ย pure,ย working at home, kind, andย submissive to their own husbands,ย that the word of God may not be reviled.

He speaks of women who are:

Reverent in the way they live Self-controlled, Pure, Devoted to their families, Kind and intentional in their influence.

At first glance, this might feel restrictive to some. But when we look deeper, we see something radically different from oppressionโ€”we see purpose, dignity, and eternal impact.

Two Voices, Two Visions

The world often defines a womanโ€™s worth by how loudly she asserts herself, how much independence she claims, or how little she needs anyone else.

Biblical womanhood, however, tells a different story.

It says:

-Your strength is not proven in self-promotion, but in self-control. Your value is not found in independence from others, but in faithfulness to God. Your influence is not diminished in the homeโ€”it is multiplied there.

-Modern feminism, at its core, often elevates the individual woman above all elseโ€”her desires, her ambitions, her autonomy. And while there are elements that rightly acknowledge dignity and value, it can easily drift into a self-centered pursuit where serving others is seen as weakness.

But the Kingdom of God flips that completely.

The Beauty of a Servantโ€™s Heart

Jesus Himself modeled this truthโ€”greatness is found in serving.

A Christian woman who walks in reverence toward God carries a quiet strength the world cannot manufacture. She understands that caring for her family, loving well, living with purity, and walking in obedience is not lesser workโ€”it is holy work.

This kind of life may not always be applauded by culture, but it is deeply honored by God.

And it is powerful.

Throughout Scripture, we see women who embodied this beautifully:

Lydia of Thyatira, whose faith and hospitality helped establish the early church Priscilla, who labored alongside her husband in ministry Phoebe, commended as a servant of the church Junia, recognized among the apostles

These women were not insignificant. They were not silenced. They were faithfulโ€”and their faithfulness shaped the Church.

What This Means for Us Today

As women of different ages, backgrounds, and seasons of life, we all feel the pull of culture in one way or another.

Some of us are raising children.

Some are working demanding jobs.

Some are doing both.

Some are in seasons of waiting, healing, or rebuilding.

The call of God is not one-size-fits-all in appearanceโ€”but it is unified in heart.

We are called to live in reverence.

To love deeply.

To serve willingly.

To walk in purity and self-control.

To reflect the goodness of God in how we move through the world.

Not because we are lessโ€”but because we belong to Him.

A Better Way

The question isnโ€™t whether women have valueโ€”we absolutely do. That is not up for debate.

The question is: Where does that value come from?

Is it rooted in self, constantly striving to prove worth?

Or is it anchored in God, already secure, already known, already loved?

The woman who fears the Lord doesnโ€™t need to fight for significanceโ€”she lives from it.

And in a world that tells her to grasp, she chooses to give.

In a culture that tells her to elevate herself, she chooses to serve.

In a moment that celebrates self, she reflects Christ.

And thatโ€ฆ is a beauty the world cannot replicate.

Godโ€™s Faithful Promises (Titus 1:2)

A promise is only as good as the one who makes it. We measure trust by two things: a personโ€™s character and their ability to follow through. When the apostle Paul opens his letter to Titus, he doesnโ€™t start with instructionโ€”he starts with God.

โ€œin hope of eternal life, which God, who never lies, promised before the ages beganโ€
โ€ญโ€ญTitusโ€ฌ โ€ญ1โ€ฌ:โ€ญ2โ€ฌ โ€ญESVโ€ฌโ€ฌ

He reminds us that God is both pure in character and perfect in capability. In this Epistle to Titus, we are told that God โ€œcannot lie.โ€ That simple truth changes everything. Our hope of eternal life is not wishful thinkingโ€”it is anchored in the very nature of the One who promised it.

This stood in sharp contrast to the culture around the Cretan Christians. In Crete, people were surrounded by stories and worship of gods like Zeusโ€”depicted as deceptive, impulsive, and morally flawed. These so-called gods reflected human brokenness, not divine perfection. But Paul points believers back to the one true God, whose truth never wavers and whose promises never fail.

The psalmist echoes this in Psalm 119: โ€œAll your commands are trueโ€ฆ you established them to last forever.โ€ Godโ€™s Word is not temporary or uncertainโ€”it is eternal, just like Him.

Because of this, our hope in Christ is secure. Eternal life is not based on our performance but on Godโ€™s unchanging character. And that truth doesnโ€™t just comfort usโ€”it transforms us.

If we follow a God who cannot lie, then we are called to be people of integrity in a world full of compromise. If we trust in a God who is eternal, then we are invited to live with eternal perspective, not just temporary concerns.

Today, rest in this: God keeps His promises. Every single one.

And as you walk through a world that doesnโ€™t yet know Him, rememberโ€”you carry the message of a faithful God whose truth changes everything.

The bright light of the gospel is meant to be shared! Will we hoard the gospel or hand it out as freely as it was given to us?

โ€œSo then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the traditions that you were taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter. Now may our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God our Father, who loved us and gave us eternal comfort and good hope through grace, comfort your hearts and establish them in every good work and word.โ€
โ€ญโ€ญ2 Thessaloniansโ€ฌ โ€ญ2โ€ฌ:โ€ญ15โ€ฌ-โ€ญ17โ€ฌ โ€ญESVโ€ฌโ€ฌ

When the Week Breaks Your Heart, Hope Still Stands

โ€œBlessed is the man who trusts in the Lord, and whose hope is the Lord.โ€ โ€” Jeremiah 17:7

Some weeks leave your heart heavier than others.

This week was spent in courtrooms advocating for childrenโ€”children who have endured horrific abuse and neglect. Children who were left in dangerous circumstances far longer than they ever should have been. Children whose small voices were ignored while the systems meant to protect them moved far too slowly.

And sometimes, painfully, the world seems to turn the story upside down. Adults who caused harm are called victims, while the suffering of the child fades into the background. Justice feels delayed. Accountability feels uncertain. And the weight of it all presses down on the heart.

On days like these, everything can feel upside down. The tears come intermittently. My heart is grieved.

But one thing remains unchanged:

God is still good.

When the brokenness of the world is on full display, I find myself clinging more tightly to the only hope that cannot fail. Thank you, Jesus, for the hope I can have regardless of present circumstances.

For the believer, the word hopeless has no place in our vocabulary. If the Lord is present, hope is present.

Scripture reminds us again and again that hope is not wishful thinkingโ€”it is a confident expectation rooted in God Himself.

The Word of God tells us that regardless of how dark or desperate a situation may seem, hope abides (1 Corinthians 13:13). Hope is not extinguished by the darkness of the world.

Our hope is anchored in Jesus Christ (1 Peter 3:15โ€“16), which means it can withstand every accusation, every injustice, every heartbreak we witness.

And perhaps most comforting of all, nothing can separate us from the love of God (Romans 8:38โ€“39). Not the failures of systems. Not the evil done by people. Not the grief we carry after hearing the stories of wounded children.

Nothing.

When the courtroom doors close and the weight of the week lingers, I am reminded that we must learn to look beyond our immediate circumstancesโ€”beyond the worry, the injustice, and the despair that so easily grips our hearts.

We look instead toward the light –

That light is the hope God gives in His Word.

It is a hope that does not deny the darkness but outshines it.

And that hopeโ€”that confident expectation in the goodness and justice of Godโ€”is what carries me.

Every single day. โœจ

The Myth of Balance

The table is set with two kinds of nourishment.

On one side, a simple sandwichโ€”bread ready to satisfy physical hunger. On the other, an open Bible, pages marked and highlighted, inviting something deeper. Both are necessary. But only one feeds the soul.

My intentional pause in a busy workday

For many busy Christian womenโ€”especially moms who work inside and outside the homeโ€”the word balance can feel like a burden. We imagine perfectly portioned days where every responsibility gets equal attention: work deadlines met, laundry folded, meals cooked, children nurtured, ministries served, friendships maintained.

But Scripture never commands us to achieve balance. It calls us to abide.

Jesus said in John 6:35,

โ€œI am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst.โ€

And again in John 7:37โ€“38,

โ€œIf anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink. Whoever believes in meโ€ฆ โ€˜Out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.โ€™โ€

Just as our bodies require daily food, our souls require daily nourishment from Godโ€™s Word. Matthew 4:4 reminds us:

โ€œMan shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.โ€

In John, Jesus refers to Himself as the Bread of Life. In John again, He describes Himself as Living Water. Bread nourishes. Water sustains. If our physical bodies require daily food to function, how much more does our soul require daily nourishment from the Word of God?

When life gets busy and frustrations rise, we often attempt to push through on sheer willpower. But our spirits grow weary when they are underfed. The Word of God strengthens us. It renews our minds. It steadies our hearts. It reminds us who we are and whose we are.

We donโ€™t merely need better time management. We need spiritual sustenance.

In Luke 10:41โ€“42, Jesus gently tells Martha:

โ€œMartha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portionโ€ฆ

The story of Mary and Martha in Luke shows us this clearly. Martha was distracted and anxious about many things. Mary chose the better portionโ€”she sat at the feet of Jesus. Martha wasnโ€™t wrong to serve. She was simply trying to carry what was never meant to be carried without first being filled.

We donโ€™t need better time managementโ€”we need spiritual sustenance.

The peace we long for isnโ€™t found in perfectly managed calendars. It flows from the Holy Spirit within usโ€”steady, sustaining, abundant. That kind of peace comes when we pause, open the Word, and sit at His feet before we rise to meet the demands of the day.

Balance says, โ€œDo more evenly.โ€

Jesus says, โ€œCome and eat.โ€

And when we feast on His Wordโ€”daily, intentionallyโ€”we rise from the table nourished, renewed, and ready.

Peace that depends on circumstances will always waver. But the peace that flows from the Holy Spirit dwelling within us is steady, rooted, and sustaining. That peace comes not from achieving balance, but from prioritizing presenceโ€”daily time in Scripture, daily communion with Christ.

The myth of balance tells us to juggle better.

The gospel invites us to sit first.

And when we sit at His feetโ€”when we feast on the Bread of Life and drink deeply of Living Waterโ€”we are strengthened to rise and serve from fullness rather than depletion.

Keep praying

Lamentations 3:40-44, โ€œโ€œLet us test and examine our ways, and return to the Lord! Let us lift up our hearts and hands to God in heaven: โ€œWe have transgressed and rebelled, and you have not forgiven. โ€œYou have wrapped yourself with anger and pursued us, killing without pity; you have wrapped yourself with a cloud so that no prayer can pass through.โ€
โ€ญโ€ญLamentationsโ€ฌ โ€ญ3โ€ฌ:โ€ญ40โ€ฌ-โ€ญ44โ€ฌ โ€ญESVโ€ฌโ€ฌ

What a gift that God purposefully allowed these words to become part of His Holy, inspired word. These verses are proof that God wants us to bring everything to Him, honestly.

For 5 years, I have recorded every meal, medication, poop, poop details, drinks, all details that make up the big picture of Jacksonโ€™s gut health. This has helped me to make shifts and those have been helpful – but even more so this has became a living history of my raw emotions going up to the Lord. My tears, frustrations, unknowns, so much effort, sometimes no gains, only setbacksโ€ฆ.

The speaker of Lamentations in 3:44 said, โ€œYou God have wrapped yourself with a cloud so that no prayer can pass through.โ€

It is ironic he said this as a line in prayer to God.
Even if you feel like your prayers are not being heard, keep praying! Despite the speakerโ€™s doubt, clearly God did hear this prayer since it is recorded in His Scriptures!

The text began with a call to โ€œtest and examine OUR waysโ€ and return to the Lord.

The people had not even asked for Godโ€™s forgiveness, let alone repented or turned, but here we see the speaker beginning to make this shift. Healing takes time.

Psalm 147:3 says the Lord, โ€œheals the brokenhearted and binds up their woundsโ€.
Whether our heartbreak is an underserved outcome of others sinning against us or even if itโ€™s caused by our own sin, God forgives those who seek His forgiveness.


He comforts. He mends.

For the first time this year, I am throwing away huge stacks of these โ€œremembranceโ€ pages. My Savior knows Jackson and He sees me. I am trusting Him and I will keep praying these special prayers for my special boy, knowing God will heal, forgive, and mend. โค๏ธ

His mercies are new every morning

You are ___ ___ ___ __ ___…..

The harshness of my words filled our home this morning. Fill in the blanks here and it is possible what I said to my husband was worse still. What started off with a sudden wake up due to dogs barking and cats meowing turned into the ugliest session of not choice first fruits from my mouth. Our very loving but too domesticated dog Barnabas will not poop in the rain, living in the PNW this is a PROBLEM to say the least. I let him outside only for him to bark to get back in and place a perfectly positioned poop right in front of the Christmas tree. Before I get this cleaned up, the cats also seemed to have a struggle session and one of them used the bathroom in our bed! I am running around trying to clean this up, quietly, while my son is still asleep on the couch getting some of his best sleep that he has had in several nights…with each step I took my foot falls became louder, my heart rate faster, and the ugly parts of my heart started to bubble out from my mouth.

James really knew what he was saying when he proclaimed, “How great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire! And the tongue is a fire, a world of unrighteousness. The tongue is set among our members, staining the whole body…”

My husband was calmly doing his morning routine, this seemed to only make me even more frustrated. I then did the worst thing possible – I began to run through the list in my head of how I always get stuck doing all of the things. I work, I mom, my son is autistic, I have slept (barely) on the couch for 6 nights, now I have tons of laundry to do, Jackson still has hand, foot, and mouth disease, I haven’t wrapped any presents…. Sister the list just went on!

"Remember my affliction and my wonderings, the wormwood and the gall! My soul continually remembers it and is bowed down within me." (Lam. 3:19-20).

I knew this was not the way. I am so blessed and even in this season of sickness and what feels like total isolation, even beyond the normal isolation that I (we) feel as a family affected by Autism, God has been present! We have had peace that surpasses understanding even in high fevers, emergency rooms, and everywhere in between. We have been graceful to each other as Christ is towards us… But in a moments time I forgot. I chose to see my circumstances as bigger than my God. I forgot that the enemy hates marriages and is after our children.

When my husband left for work my heart was heavy, my soul was what the writer of Lamentations referred to as, “bowed low” within me.

And then in a moment of what could have ONLY been the prompting of the Holy Spirit- I grabbed my prayer journal and began writing down all of the things I have been GRATEFUL for these last several days. Friend let me tell you – darkness will flee from the presence of God’s light. It took mere moments for my heart to soften and for my rage to be replaced by the deep awareness and need to repent. I prayed, I opened my Bible, and I got back to my study in Lamentations that has been on an extended pause this last week. And God’s Word, His living Word, spoke directly to what my soul needed.

But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. "The Lord is my portion", says my soul, "therefore I will hope in him".

In Lamentations 3:18, we see the speaker say, “his endurance has vanished” and in 3:20, “his soul is bowed low”…. His soul was remembering his affliction continually…

BUT – the man has a turning point – he CHOOSES to do something important. The mans situation felt dark and hopeless. In Lam. 3:21 the man says, “But this I call to mind…”

Dr. Christopher Wright describes this verse in this way,

“It is the deliberate, determined, teeth gritting decision to call something to mind.”

This was not a reaction based purely on feelings – pay attention here – THIS WAS AN ACTION OF WILL!

Consider how Godly Grief is different than Worldly Grief:

2 Corinthians 7:10-11, "For Godly grief produces repentance that leads to Salvation without regret. Whereas worldly grief produces death."

Simply defined: Repentance is regret for having lost God's approval, which leads to a commitment to reverse one's conduct and live for God. Worldly grief is grief brought about by loosing the world's approval, this leads to trying to regain that approval, and this produces death or divine judgment.

Lamentations 3:23 says, God’s “mercies” are new every morning. This refers to not only a literal morning but also figurative as well. Every night we go to bed knowing the sun will rise the next day. The morning will come. The same is true of God’s mercy.

Even when it feels dark, the daylight of God’s illuminating GRACE and HOPE is on the way. Recall this truth to mind when times are hard. And the best way to call this truth to mind is remember it.

These few verses in Lamentations this morning reminded me of these foundational truths:

  1. God’s love is steadfast. It never leaves us or changes.
  2. God’s mercies never end, they are new everyday.
  3. God is faithful.
  4. God is my portion, in Christ I lack NOTHING.
  5. God ALONE is where I find HOPE that never ceases.

Every Advent I pray that the Lord will reveal Himself to me in a new, deeper way. This morning, this last week, He did that experientially.

Friends, I pray my blundering moment this morning reminds you too that God’s mercies are new every morning. We are victorious in Christ – we have the FREEDOM to CHOOSE HIM. And in Him we will find everything we need.

Photo by dalia nava on Pexels.com

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑