Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Poised for Unprecedented Blessings


Poised for Unprecedented Blessings: A Teachable Heart in Changing Times

The things we carry in our hearts can quietly weigh us down, and the saddest part is that many of us refuse to let them go. Too often, we don’t see ourselves the way God sees us, so we resist the very changes that could completely transform our lives.

Through Scripture, God has given us an incredible, chronological record of real people who walked with Him. We see their obedience and their failures, their victories and their missteps. These accounts weren’t preserved by accident. Our Heavenly Father gave them to us for our learning. Woven into each life is a pattern—one we can apply to elevate our own faith and deepen our commitment to Christ. And one truth stands out among them all: God rewarded faithfulness. That truth is especially important for us to digest in the season we’re living in now.

In Genesis 12:2 (NLT), God promised Abraham, “I will make you into a great nation. I will bless you and make you famous, and you will be a blessing to others.” Later, in Genesis 17:5 (NLT) God reaffirmed the promise, expanding Abraham’s understanding of its magnitude: “What’s more, I am changing your name. It will no longer be Abram. Instead, you will be called Abraham, for you will be the father of many nations.”

It took twenty-five years for Abraham and Sarah to become fully persuaded of the promise God made. Not one second of that promise came to pass before their faith was ready to receive it. Abraham believed in God’s power, yet at seventy-five years old, he still struggled to make the full leap of faith. He looked at his own body and considered his seed dead. He looked at Sarah—beautiful even in her later years—and believed her womb was dead as well.

Hebrews 11:6 (NLT) says, “And it is impossible to please God without faith. Anyone who wants to come to him must believe that God exists and that he rewards those who sincerely seek him.” God is loving and patient, but faith in Him is not optional. He did not bring the promise to pass until Abraham’s faith came into alignment with what God had spoken.

At one point, Abraham and Sarah agreed to lie about being husband and wife when powerful men were around them. They believed this was necessary for survival. In their culture, the most beautiful women were often taken by kings or pharaohs, and they feared Abraham’s life would be at risk if the truth were known. Many would call that self-preservation. God calls it doubt.

How could they trust God for a promise that would shape nations, yet not trust Him for protection? They didn’t yet understand the damage that occurs when a lie is chosen over truth. We sometimes excuse certain habits or attitudes by calling them “just part of who we are.” But in John 8:44 (NLT), Jesus was very clear about the nature of lies: “For you are the children of your father the devil, and you love to do the evil things he does… When he lies, it is consistent with his character; for he is a liar and the father of lies.” Faith cannot fully grow where lies are still being tolerated, no matter how small they seem. So when we excuse a lie—about ourselves, our fears, or our circumstances—we aren’t just being human; we’re partnering with something that was never meant to shape our lives.

It should never be said of a follower of Christ that we’ve clung to a lie and refused to walk in truth. We are children of the light. Darkness—of any kind—was never meant to be something we hold onto. Excuses cannot cover a lack of faith. We must be willing to pray and allow the Holy Spirit to guide us to the root of whatever is keeping our blessings at bay.

When God gave Abraham the promise, He already knew Abraham would be teachable and willing to follow His guidance. Abraham wasn’t perfect. He made real mistakes, but his faith was anchored in God. When trouble came, he didn’t harden himself or cling to control. He looked to his Heavenly Father for direction.

That posture matters.

There are many who have been on this journey a long time. They’ve endured hardship, disappointment, and delay, yet they are worn down and resistant, not because God has failed them, but because they are unwilling to remain flexible before Him. Instead of coming to God with a heart that is open and willing to learn, they insist on doing things the way they’ve always done them.

That outlook isn’t sustainable.

Throughout Scripture, we see that God is deeply invested in our spiritual growth—it is not secondary, but a priority in His plan for us. Ephesians 4:15 tells us that as we speak the truth in love, we grow in every way more and more like Christ, who is the head of His body, the church. And 1 Peter 2:2–3 (NLT) says, “Like newborn babies, you must crave pure spiritual milk so that you will grow into a full experience of salvation. Cry out for this nourishment, 3 now that you have had a taste of the Lord's kindness.” This kind of growth requires humility and hunger. It requires a willingness to be taught, corrected, and reshaped by God rather than insisting on staying the same.

There is a growing agreement across pulpits and sanctuaries that this season carries unprecedented blessings for many—yet it will also require discernment, humility, and faith. That truth isn’t meant to create pressure or comparison; it’s meant to invite us into readiness. God’s blessings flow most freely where hearts remain soft, teachable, and aligned with Him.

So pray as often as you have opportunity. Seek the Lord. Ask Him to reveal anything in your heart that displeases Him. He will show you, and when He does, humility will be required. Trust that surrender and repentance are not losses, but doorways. When we yield to God, the right doors open, the wrong ones close, and transformation begins.

Scripture quotations marked (NLT) are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.

“Poised for Unprecedented Blessings: A Teachable Heart in Changing Times”, written for https://rescuefromdomesticviolence.blogspot.com© 2026. All rights reserved. All praise and honor to God through Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

What You Have to Do for YOU





What You Have to Do for YOU

Believers are being pulled in a thousand different directions right now. We’re told we should jump on certain bandwagons, adopt certain stances, and believe that God won’t be pleased if we don’t. Yet for many of us, something about all of this doesn’t sit right. There’s a growing uneasiness, a sense that the noise is loud but the clarity is thin. The truth is, we must be extremely cautious about the opinions we allow to shape us—no matter who holds them or what position they occupy.

In the grand scope of our individual lives, what matters most is not public approval or spiritual trends, but how we are responding to our personal relationship with our Heavenly Father through the Lord Jesus Christ. Hebrews 4:13 (NLT) reminds us, “Nothing in all creation is hidden from God. Everything is naked and exposed before his eyes, and he is the one to whom we are accountable.” When everything is said and done, each of us will stand before God alone to give an account of the life we have lived. That reality brings clarity. It calls us to live intentionally—to walk in His love, to obey His leading, and to take responsibility for what is necessary to live a meaningful, faithful, and spiritually grounded life.

God’s Plan for Your Life

God has a plan for your individual life. This truth carries more weight than language can fully express. Proverbs 19:21 (NLT) reminds us, “You can make many plans, but the LORD’s purpose will prevail.” Yet some believers live as though human behavior can derail God’s agenda or delay His purposes. Scripture does not support that fear. Romans 8:28 tells us that God is the One who causes everything to work together. His purposes are never fragile, never threatened, and never dependent on human perfection. God’s power, plan, and purpose move forward with precision and wisdom, untouched by chaos or uncertainty.

From the very beginning, God demonstrated this. He formed the universe with intention and order, completing everything necessary for creation to function according to His design. When He rested, it was not because something was unfinished, but because everything was complete. God has not changed. He is just as sovereign today as He was when He parted the Red Sea. His plan does not wobble under pressure, nor does it require constant correction. His purposes stand firm.

Aligning With What God Has Already Planned

What this means for us is not that our choices don’t matter. They do. They just matter differently than we often think. We can’t derail God’s plan, but we can resist participating in what He wants to shape inside of us. God isn’t rushing around trying to force blessings into our lives. He is faithful to lead, guide, and prepare us to walk in what He has already purposed.

Ephesians 2:10 (NLT) tells us, “For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago.” Those “good things” are more than blessings we receive. They include the good works we are invited to walk in. These are privileges prepared by God, not assignments we earn. They already exist, waiting. But we experience them only when we choose alignment with Him and say yes to the path He’s laid out.

God’s plan for your life fits beautifully within His greater plan for the world. The real challenge isn’t trying to figure out everyone else’s assignment or getting pulled into things God never gave us to carry. The priority is learning to seek Him for His direction, His timing, and His purpose for our own lives. When we do, clarity begins to replace confusion. Peace pushes out pressure. And we stop getting distracted by noise that has nothing to do with God’s Will for us.

Be Clear About What You Want

Faith requires focus. Faith doesn’t respond to impulse, noise, or emotional swings. It responds to a settled trust in God—a heart that’s fully persuaded.

Abraham is called the father of faith, but not because everything made sense right away. When God spoke the promise, Sarah laughed—it seemed impossible. They were far past the years of childbearing, and nothing in their circumstances supported what God said. Yet Abraham kept walking with God, showing up day after day, decade after decade, until his faith matured. Faith isn’t measured by instant results; it’s revealed through endurance, alignment, and trust.

God knew Abraham and Sarah would stay the course. They couldn’t force the promise, shortcut the process, or push God’s hand. They had to align themselves with His plan, remain consistent in obedience, and persevere until the impossible became reality. Their story teaches us that faith grows and breakthroughs happen when we partner with God’s purpose instead of trying to manage everything ourselves.

Positioned for What God Prepared

This is where the work becomes personal. What you have to do for you is get honest about what God is calling you to trust Him with, and whether your life is actually aligned with that call.

This means showing up consistently in prayer, worship, and obedience. It means staying steady when the world is noisy and distractions are loud. It also means checking your heart. Are you pursuing God’s blessings, or trying to reshape them to fit your own timeline or idea of “good”?

Abraham and Sarah’s story shows us that clarity plus alignment equals faith in motion. Your role isn’t to make God’s plan happen. It’s to walk faithfully where He’s leading, do the work He’s invited you to do, and keep your heart anchored in trust. That’s the work you do for yourself. It’s your responsibility, your opportunity, and your privilege—to position yourself to receive what God has already prepared.

Faith is active. Faith is intentional. Faith says, “I see what You’ve promised, Lord, and I’m walking steady with You—even when it takes time, even when I can’t see the full picture.” That’s what it looks like to get clear and get aligned. That’s what you have to do for YOU.

Scripture quotations marked (NLT) are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.

“What You Have to Do for YOU”, written for https://rescuefromdomesticviolence.blogspot.com© 2025. All rights reserved. All praise and honor to God through Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.

Poised for Unprecedented Blessings

Poised for Unprecedented Blessings: A Teachable Heart in Changing Times The things we carry in our hearts can quietly weigh us down, and...