Will We Believe?
Choosing Faith Over Worry
My oldest son, who is active-duty military, had been home for a two-week visit. The day he was scheduled to fly back to his base, he left our house at 4:30 AM after saying goodbye to his family, his dog, and his fiancé. After two flights and a long bus ride, he reached his car. Nearly 24 hours of travel later, in a country where he didn't speak the language, his car broke down, nearly driving him into oncoming traffic before stalling out. My son was 6,587 miles away from home on a continent across an ocean, and there was nothing I could do to help him.
In another instance, my daughter called from college, four hours away. "Mom, I locked my keys in my car!" I tentatively asked where her spare keys were. At home. In my kitchen. Once again, I was powerless to help.
Just when my son was at the end of his resources, God sent a church van driven by an American pastor, who stopped to help. And though my daughter had driven all around town that morning, she was on her college campus when she locked herself out. Campus security was there to assist her. She could have been stranded during any of her errands, but God allowed her to be locked out at school, where help was available.
Through situations like these, the Lord has shown me that I can trust Him with what matters most - my kids, my family, my finances, my future. This should give me peace and keep my worries to a minimum. It should, but that's not always the case.
My pastor recently shared a passage from Psalm 78:32 that caught my attention: "In spite of all this, they kept on sinning; in spite of his wonders, they did not believe." The Israelites had somehow forgotten all that God had done for them - the miracles He performed, like parting the Red Sea, guiding them with a cloud by day and fire by night, providing water from rocks in the desert, and sending manna from the sky.
I'd like to think that if God did those things for me, I'd never forget or doubt Him! But I'm not so different from the Israelites. God has intervened in my life more times than I'm aware, leaving more than enough evidence that He's aware of my concerns and more than capable of addressing them.
After all God has done for me, how can I still worry? Where does my doubt come from?
My pastor posed a simple question to our congregation: “Will we believe God?”
Friend, I'll ask you the same: Will you believe God to care for what's burdening you? Can you look back on your life and see the times when God came through for you in ways you never could have on your own? Bills paid when you lacked the means. Relationships restored that seemed irreparable. Illnesses healed when the prognosis looked grim. That's the handiwork of our God! What's impossible for us is possible for Him. But we have to believe that He is able.
He won't always help us in the way we want, but that's not because He can't. It's because His ways are best and result in His glory. If He can stop my son's car before it stalls in traffic and send an English-speaking pastor in a place where English is rarely spoken, He can be trusted with whatever concerns you're carrying.
Look back on your life and consider some of the hardships you've overcome. Can you see God's handiwork there? If not, look harder. He's been with you every step of the way.
As we're reminded in Ephesians 3:20-21, "Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen."
Friend, you can trust in God's ability and willingness to care for you. He's proven Himself faithful time and time again. We just need to choose to believe and then rest in His love and power.
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