God Sees It Differently

Bible Passages

Read Isaiah 55.

Your eyes saw me when I was still an unborn child. Every day of my life was recorded in your book before one of them had taken place.

Psalm 139:16 (GW)

Devotion

Recently, God filled my heart with a new purpose which would require all my time and energy. He gave me a full-time job. Spread the Love Ministries, this mission, is that new purpose. I have several qualities that make me a good fit for this mission. However, there are also many, many things missing from my resume. God sees it differently. He believes in me, even when I have doubts.

At the time, I had no other job, no income. I saw this as a hindrance. God sees it differently. Bills kept coming in: rent, electricity, my dad’s medical bills, and so much else. I was overwhelmed. I had a hard time not worrying. I had a hard time trusting God would provide me with everything I needed, even though I knew He would – just as He has a million times before. I had to be strong. God sees it differently. He is the source of my strength. He will lend me the strength I need to do His will. All I needed to do is ask.

This was a big ask, though. I didn’t feel worthy. I didn’t feel up to the task. God sees it differently. He has my path mapped out, and will show me, each step of the way, what I need to do. He will take care of the rest. All I have to do is ask.

I prayed hard about it. I prayed unlike any prayer I had ever prayed before. I laid myself at His feet, begging for His help and guidance. I asked.

A few days later, I began to see how God was taking care of my needs. I received unexpected money from family and other sources. I was gifted food. I got an offer to help with my sorely neglected yard. The vision I had been given to help my neighbors began with my neighbors helping me! [I think God has a passion for irony, wry humor, and precision timing.]

I realized then that although I am not the leader I thought I needed to be. God is. I am the follower. I am not strong. God is. I can’t see the path I am walking, but I know how to get to where I’m going. All I need to see is the next stepping stone God has laid for me. I stopped worrying about living up to my idea of God’s expectations and let go of the reins. All I need do is what is required of me, one step at a time.

When I think I am at the end of my rope, God sees it differently. He uses those times as opportunities for my growth as a Christian. He simply gives me a longer, stronger rope! He will provide, exactly as He promised. I just need to make sure to put my trust in Him, and ask for His help, in all things.

Praise God in all things!

Prayer Focus

People who are unemployed.

Prayer

Heavenly Father who made me for a specific purpose, thank you for being there for me every step of the way you have laid out for me. Help me to stay on course, centered on You, and keep me safe as I do Your will in all things, big and small. Amen.

Final Thought

God has a plan for me.

The Favorite Son

Bible Passages

Read Genesis 37-50.

Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time

1 Peter 5:6 (NASB1995)

Devotion

Before you were born, God set a special path, designed just for you and only you. He created you to be the perfect person for that path. Only you can travel your special path. If you stay on that path, it will be easy and fun (mostly). Along the way, He will hold your hand. He will carry you through the difficult parts, the challenges, the tests.

All you need do is follow where He leads you. He will provide almost everything you need to succeed. There is only one thing missing: you. God gave us free will, the ability to choose for ourselves what we do with our lives. He wants you to give yourself, fully and completely, to Him. When you do this, the results will amaze you!

The Bible is full of examples of people who went through hard times and came out with more blessings than they ever imagined. Joseph, for example, shows us how to follow God’s path. He shows us how to be godly, happy, and blessed. Even when he fell into darkness, God was with him. We remember him because he held tightly to God’s hand through the bad times and the good times.

We remember him and so many others because we love to hear their stories over and over. Their stories put our own troubles into perspective, and give us hope when we’re going through dark times. They remind us that God loves to take us out of our lowest moments, and bring us to our highest moments. Just like the dark nights make us appreciate the sunrise, our dark moments make us appreciate God’s blessings with praise and gratitude.

Joseph was on top of the world as a child. His family was prosperous. He lacked for nothing. His father favored him above all his other children. God blessed him with dreams, showing him that one day he would be in a situation where his brothers would bow to him. Confused and excited, he shared his dreams with his brothers, who already thought he was too big for his breeches. Hearing they would kowtow to him, it was the last straw for his jealous siblings.

Soon after, he was ambushed by his own brothers and sold into slavery, literally thrown away. Joseph was steadfast in his love of God, however, and he continued to be true to himself. He was kind to others. He held to his beliefs and worshiped God. He developed leadership skills. He remained trustworthy and honest, and loved God. God continued to bless Joseph and those around him, bringing them prosperity. God also continued giving him dreams, which he shared with others.

Through a series of events in which Joseph was falsely accused of misdeeds, he found himself in jail. While Joseph was in jail, the pharaoh had a dream. His advisors had no idea how to interpret this dream, but God told Joseph what the dream meant, and provided the opportunity for Joseph to witness to pharaoh. Joseph was immediately released from prison and installed as the second-in-command over Egypt, answering only to the pharaoh. Joseph was still enjoying the blessings of God, and Egypt prospered.

Meanwhile, Joseph’s family fell on hard times. A drought plagued the land, and his brothers were going hungry. Joseph’s father sent his brothers to beg for the mercy of the pharaoh, hoping he would share some food with them. They were presented to Joseph to plead their case. They were bowing and groveling at his feet so much, they didn’t recognize him as their brother. After putting them through a couple of challenges designed to test their characters, Joseph revealed himself to them and granted their request. The story continues, but I will stop here. As predicted in his childhood dream, Joseph was lifted up into the exact position God planned for him.

Joseph endured all the hardships set before him, praising God all the while. Joseph’s faithfulness to God paid off. God’s plan for him was fulfilled. Joseph was set on high, blessed beyond his wildest dreams, and lived a full and happy life. He remains an example of what it means to hold tight to God.

Prayer Focus

People with big dreams.

Prayer

Our Great and Mighty Father on high, thank You for making me. Thank You for loving me. Thank you for your blessings and your trials. Thank you for giving me everything I have. Use me as a vessel of Thy great and everlasting love. Amen.

Final Thought

God pushes us to be better.

Lamb of God

Bible Passages

29 Now it happened at midnight that Yahweh struck all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the dungeon, and all the firstborn of cattle. 30 Then Pharaoh arose in the night, he and all his servants and all the Egyptians, and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was no home where there was not someone dead. 31 Then he called for Moses and Aaron at night and said, “Rise up, get out from among my people, both you and the sons of Israel; and go, serve Yahweh, as you have spoken. 32 Take both your flocks and your herds, as you have spoken, and go, and bless me also.”

Exodus 12:29-32 (Legacy Standard Bible)

29 On the next day, he saw Jesus coming to him and said, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world! 30 This is He of whom I said, ‘After me comes a man who has been ahead of me, for He existed before me.’ 31 I did not know Him, but so that He might be manifested to Israel, I came baptizing with water.” 32And John bore witness saying, “I have beheld the Spirit descending as a dove out of heaven, and He abided on Him. 33 And I did not know Him, but He who sent me to baptize with water said to me, ‘The One upon whom you see the Spirit descending and abiding on Him, this is the One who baptizes with the Holy Spirit.’ 34 And I myself have seen, and have borne witness that this is the Son of God.”

John 1:29-34 (Legacy Standard Bible)

Devotion

During Lent, we hear a lot about the Lamb of God, the Last Supper, and the Cross. We know about the Exodus from Egypt, and the speculation that the Last Supper was a Passover Feast. We don’t often delve deeper into the parallels between Passover and the Crucifixion.

We know that the tenth and final plague on Egypt was the original Passover. God told the tribe of Israel, through Moses, to gather up enough lambs to feed the tribe, no more and no less. The lambs had to be pure and without blemish. They were kept separate until the appointed day and time. These lambs were then slaughtered. Their blood was used to mark the houses of those to be saved. The body was used to feed the tribe of Israel, those to be saved. Any leftovers were destroyed.

That night, God took the firstborn male of every Egyptian and their livestock. The Egyptian gods were also defeated. However, the firstborn males of the tribe of Israel were untouched. They were saved. It was the last straw for Pharaoh. When he lost his own firstborn son, he was finally broken and gave in to God’s will, chasing the Jewish people from his lands and even asked for our God to bless him!

The first commandment God gave the Jewish people was to observe Passover by fasting and feasting, in remembrance of Him and what He did for them, which is still practiced today. The Passover feast of Jewish tradition contains many symbolic foods. Bitter herbs represent the suffering of the tribe as slaves, salt water is served for the tears shed during slavery, and a piece of lamb to remember God’s love and protection (after the destruction of the Temple, it was changed to a bone).

Fast forward about 1400 years, to first century Jerusalem.

Jesus was the firstborn Son of God, His only son.

He was pure and without blemish.

He was sacrificed in order to save us.

He died during Passover.

We have new symbols and rituals, which we perform in remembrance of Him and what He did for us. As He told His disciples during their last meal together before the Crucifixion, the wine was a symbol of the blood He would shed for us. The bread was a symbol of His body, which was beaten, sliced open, and then killed, slaughtered, for us.

Our new Passover feast is known as Holy Communion.

Our new fasting is known as Lent, during which we symbolically give up something dear and take up something difficult but worthy and follow Him.

During this season of Passover, as we partake of the Holy Sacrament, let’s reflect on the reason we do these things. Let us bear in our hearts how much love God has for us, his chosen people. Let us remember Jesus and His sacrifice. Let us eat of His body. Let us drink His blood. Let us be renewed in the knowledge that He did these things for us, so we might follow His example of love. Let us rededicate our lives to Christ, so we may glorify Him in all we do. Let us reflect, in our own feeble ways, the life He lived.

According to the Gospels, right before Jesus was arrested by the Romans, He begged God to take the cross from the path He was to walk, knowing it was the only way to teach us His final lessons. He knew how hard the next few days would be. At the end of that prayer, He chose to continue on that path anyway. He chose the hard stuff. He chose the cross, because it was God’s will.

We all face challenges, tests, and hardships. Let us bear our own symbolic crosses with the grace and dignity Jesus showed us when He took up the cross. Let us remember God is with us in everything we do, good and bad. Let us lean on Him. He will see us through anything and everything!

Prayer Focus

Those taking their first Holy Communion.

Prayer

Our Father, who art in heaven, who gave His only son so we might have a deep, personal relationship with You, we thank You for loving us. We thank You for showing us, in such a meaningful way, how You want us to live. We thank You for Your salvation through the blood of Jesus. Amen.

Final Thought

Jesus gave up everything for us. Let us be willing to give up everything for Him, according to His will.

But God …

Bible Passages

Read 1 Corinthians 2:1-5.

“Now may the God of peace, who brought back from the dead our Lord Jesus, the great shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the eternal covenant, make you complete in everything good so that you may do his will, working among us that which is pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory for ever and ever. Amen.” – Hebrews 13:20-21 (NSRV)

Devotion

As a mature, responsible young adult, I tried very hard to handle my own affairs. Juggling schedules, finances, people, and family was too much. I always dropped one or two balls. My biggest problem, I found out, was me. I was not capable of stepping far enough back or climbing up high enough to see the big picture, but God is. He created the one true “big picture,” and created me to do my part in it.

By trying to do things on my own, I actually created more stress and chaos than if I had done what God was telling me to do. I forgot where to get strength and wisdom. I forgot a lot of things, but God never does. He has a plan, and created me to fit exactly where He needs me to be.

When I forget to listen to Him, He sends me a message. It might be in the form of a friend’s comment during a conversation. I might hear something on the radio or television. Usually, it it a small tug on my heart. Sometimes, He takes matters into His own hands and speaks to me directly.

Once, shortly after my husband died, I was so lost, confused, overwhelmed and stressed out, He actually said loudly, “Hush!” I got the message, and tried to quiet my mind enough for Him to get a word in edgewise. I’m not sure I succeeded completely, but God didn’t take any further corrective action, so I must have been partially successful, at least.

Other times, I feel like Jonah. I really don’t think I’m the right person for the job before me, and try to argue, in a piercing, whiny child voice, “But God, I can’t do that,” and run the other way. Fortunately, I haven’t been eaten by a whale, but I am sometimes swallowed by a giant swamp. I sink in the muck. I get tangled in the prickly briars. Moss gets in my hair. Bugs fly all around me. I think I’m done for, but God is always there to lift me out of the bog and set my feet on solid ground, once I quit running from His will and the task at hand.

Nope, there are no but’s about it. If I listen with my heart and obey that small, quiet voice within me, it all works out the way God intends and I can live a peaceful, happy life free from worry and stress. God knows what He’s doing, and He created me for a specific purpose. All I have to do is trust Him.

Prayer Focus

People struggling with God’s purpose for them.

Prayer

Almighty, All-Knowing, All-Seeing God, help me to listen with my heart to Your small, quiet voice. I know You will guide my travels through this life, and all I have to do is ask You for guidance. You prepared this path for me, and me alone. Let me be a vessel that carries Your love to my fellow human beings. Let me be a light to those seeking You. Let me be Your voice in the wilderness. Amen.

Final Thought

With God, there are no if’s, and’s or but’s.