“This is what the LORD says— your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel: “I am the LORD your God, who teaches you what is good for you and leads you along the paths you should follow.” – Isaiah 48:17.
One of the most common questions people ask during difficult seasons is, “Why is this happening to me?” But perhaps a better question is, “What is God trying to teach me through this?”
That shift changes everything.
Life has a way of placing us in classrooms we never volunteered to enter. A disappointing diagnosis. A strained relationship. A closed door. A season of waiting that seems endless. None of us enjoys those moments. In fact, most of us spend our energy trying to escape them as quickly as possible. But Scripture repeatedly reminds us that God often does His deepest work in us during the seasons we would have chosen to avoid.
James wrote, “Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything” (James 1:2-4). Notice James does not say trials are joyful because they are pleasant. He says they are meaningful because God uses them to produce something valuable within us.
God is always more interested in our character than our comfort.
Sometimes God is teaching us patience because we have spent years demanding immediate answers. Sometimes, He teaches us to trust because we have depended too much on our own strength. Sometimes, He teaches us compassion because pain has a way of softening hard hearts and helping us understand the struggles of others.
And sometimes the lesson is simply this: God is enough.
Perhaps today God is teaching you to slow down. To forgive. To surrender control. To deepen your faith. To rely less on yourself and more on Him. To discover that His grace really is sufficient. Whatever lesson God may be teaching, the goal is never simply information. God’s desire is transformation.
Years from now, you may look back on a difficult season and realize it became one of the greatest turning points in your spiritual life. The very thing you wanted removed may have been the thing God used most powerfully to shape your heart.
So instead of only asking God to change your circumstances, ask Him to change you through your circumstances.
Because sometimes the greatest miracle is not that God removes the storm, but that He uses the storm to transform us.
Discussion Questions:
- What difficult situation or unexpected season in your life might God be using to teach you something about faith, patience, humility, or trust?
- How can we tell the difference between simply going through hard times and actually learning the lesson God may be trying to teach us through them?