WHAT IS GOD TRYING TO TEACH YOU

“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:

  1. What difficult situation or unexpected season in your life might God be using to teach you something about faith, patience, humility, or trust?
  2. 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?

SPIRITUAL DISCERNMENT VS. OVERTHINKING

Wisdom seeks God’s guidance. Fear seeks guaranteed outcomes.” – Unkown.

Most people will ask themselves this question at some point in their lives. When is it wisdom and when is it fear dressed up as caution?

There is a fine line between spiritual discernment and plain old overthinking, and many of us cross that line several times before breakfast. And because we desperately want to make the “right” decision, we sometimes become spiritually paralyzed. We confuse hesitation with holiness.

Now, to be fair, discernment is important. Scripture repeatedly encourages wisdom, prayer, and seeking God’s direction. Not every open door is from God, and not every opportunity should be pursued. Discernment listens carefully for God’s voice and seeks peace, truth, and alignment with His character.

One of the clearest signs that fear has disguised itself as caution is when we endlessly delay obedience, waiting for perfect certainty. We want God to provide a detailed five-year strategic plan complete with diagrams, weather forecasts, and backup options. Meanwhile, God often gives us just enough light for the next step.

God usually leads one faithful step at a time.

Sometimes we over-spiritualize decisions because we are afraid of making mistakes. But God is not waiting to punish us for imperfect choices. He is a loving Father capable of directing, correcting, and guiding us even when we stumble.

Fear says: “What if I fail?”

Faith says: “What if God is faithful even if things are hard?”

That changes everything.

There are moments when caution is wise. If a decision violates Scripture, damages relationships, feeds temptation, or comes from pride, discernment should absolutely slow us down. Godly wisdom matters.

But fear-based overthinking often keeps us stuck in circles long after God has already called us forward. At some point, faith requires movement.

Peter did not fully analyze the water before stepping out of the boat. Abraham did not receive every detail before leaving home. Many times throughout Scripture, obedience came before complete understanding.

That is still true today.

If you find yourself trapped in endless mental debates, ask yourself honestly:

Am I seeking God’s wisdom — or am I trying to eliminate every possibility of discomfort? Because faith has never meant the absence of uncertainty. It means trusting God in the middle of it.

Discussion Questions

  1. Have you ever mistaken fear or anxiety for “being cautious” or “waiting on God”? What helped you recognize the difference?
  2. What is one area of your life where God may be asking you to take a faithful next step instead of continuing to overthink the outcome?

WHEN JESUS WAS AMAZED AT A MAN’S FAITH

“When Jesus heard this, he was amazed and said to those following him, ‘Truly I tell you, I have not found anyone in Israel with such great faith.” – Matthew 8:10 (NIV).

To hear Jesus say, “What amazing faith,” would be the greatest compliment imaginable.

One of the most remarkable stories of faith in the Gospels is found in Matthew 8:5–13. A Roman centurion—a military officer, a Gentile, and an outsider to the Jewish faith—approached Jesus with a request that would leave even Christ amazed. The centurion’s servant was suffering terribly, and he came seeking help. What makes this story extraordinary is not only the miracle that followed but the kind of faith the centurion displayed.

The centurion understood authority. As a commander of soldiers, he knew how power worked. Orders were given, and people obeyed. Yet when he stood before Jesus, he recognized a far greater authority than Rome could ever possess. He said to Jesus, “Just say the word from where you are, and my servant will be healed.” He believed Jesus did not need to touch the servant, travel to the house, or perform some elaborate act. A single word from Christ was enough.

Jesus responded with amazement: “I have not found anyone in Israel with such great faith.”

That statement should make every believer pause. The people who had the Scriptures, the traditions, and generations of spiritual instruction struggled to trust Jesus fully, while this Roman soldier saw clearly who Jesus was. Faith is not merely familiarity with religion. It is confidence in the power, goodness, and authority of Christ.

The centurion also demonstrated humility. Though he was a man of status and influence, he said, “I am not worthy that You should come under my roof.” Real faith is always accompanied by humility. Pride tries to impress God with achievements or religious performance. Humility simply admits its need. The centurion did not approach Jesus demanding help because of his rank. He came as a needy man, trusting in mercy.

That humility challenges us today. We often try to appear spiritually strong, self-sufficient, and in control. Yet God responds to hearts that recognize their dependence upon Him. Faith begins when we stop pretending we can handle life on our own.

There are moments in every life when we stand where the centurion stood. We face situations beyond our ability to fix. A loved one suffers. A relationship breaks. Fear and uncertainty overwhelm us. In those moments, Jesus still invites us to trust Him completely. His authority has not diminished. His compassion has not weakened. His word still carries power.

The centurion reminds us that amazing faith is not complicated. It is humble enough to admit need, confident enough to trust Christ’s authority, compassionate enough to care for others, and bold enough to believe before seeing results.

Discussion Questions:

  1. In Matthew 8, the Roman centurion trusted Jesus’ authority so deeply that he believed Jesus could heal his servant with only a word. What does this story teach us about faith, authority, and trust in God, even when we cannot physically see the outcome yet?
  2. Jesus praised the centurion’s faith as greater than any He had found in Israel. How does the centurion’s humility and compassion for his servant challenge the way we think about leadership, status, and caring for others today?

LET YOUR YES BE YES: LIVING WITH INTEGRITY IN A WORLD OF INFLATED WORDS

Let what you say be simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’; anything more than this comes from evil.” – Matthew 5:37 (ESV).

One of the most striking moments in Jesus’ teaching comes in Matthew 5:33–37, where He speaks directly to the human habit of making promises, swearing oaths, and trying to reinforce truth with extra layers of language. In a world where words can be carefully shaped to persuade, protect reputation, or escape accountability, Jesus cuts through all of it with something simple and disarming: let your “yes” be yes, and your “no” be no.

At first glance, it almost sounds too simple. We’re used to thinking that strong statements need strong backing. Contracts, signatures, legal assurances, affidavits—our world runs on formal guarantees. Even in casual life, we sometimes lean on phrases like “I swear,” “I promise,” as if adding weight to our words will make them more believable. But Jesus isn’t just talking about legal systems. He’s talking about character.

In Matthew 5:27–37, part of the broader Sermon on the Mount, Jesus keeps moving beneath external behavior and into the heart behind it. When He addresses oaths, He is pointing to something deeper: the tendency to use words strategically rather than truthfully.

A life shaped by the kingdom of God does not need verbal inflation to be trusted. It doesn’t rely on layers of emphasis or creative wording to appear honest. It is simply steady. Reliable. Transparent.

That’s a hard standard, because most of us have learned, consciously or not, that words can be adjusted depending on the situation. We soften them when we want to avoid conflict. We strengthen them when we want to be believed. We hedge them when we want an exit strategy. Over time, that habit can make speech less about truth and more about advantage.

Jesus calls us back to something more grounded. Think about what it would mean to be the kind of person whose simple word carries weight. Not because of force or fear, but because of trust built over time. People don’t need to wonder if you meant what you said. They don’t need to decode your phrasing or check for hidden clauses. There is clarity.

That kind of clarity is deeply spiritual. It reflects a heart shaped by truthfulness in the presence of God, not just by performance in front of others. It also removes a heavy burden. When you no longer have to constantly reinforce your credibility with oaths or exaggerations, you are freed to simply live honestly.

So the question becomes personal: Is my speech dependable without reinforcement? Do my words require upgrades to be believed, or is there a growing simplicity and truthfulness in how I speak?

Jesus is inviting us into that kind of life. A life where truth is not something we occasionally swear to, but something we consistently live.

Discussion Questions:

  1. In Matthew 5:33–37, Jesus emphasizes letting our “yes” be yes and our “no” be no. What are some everyday situations where you find yourself tempted to strengthen your words with extra emphasis, exaggeration, or “oaths,” and what might that reveal about your trust in honesty and integrity?
  2. How does living with consistent truthfulness—so that your simple word can be trusted—change the way you approach relationships, commitments, and your witness as a follower of Christ?

LIVING RIGHT BEFORE GOD AND OTHERS: FIDELITY, INTEGRITY, AND THE TRUTH THAT SHAPES THE HEART

In the same way, let your good deeds shine out for all to see, so that everyone will praise your heavenly Father.” – Matthew 5:16

In Matthew 5:27–37, Jesus Christ calls us to a way of life that goes beyond rules and appearances. It is a life shaped by inner purity, faithful love, and honest speech—how we live right before God, and others begins in the heart.

Jesus first addresses sexuality and thought life. He teaches that righteousness is not only about avoiding outward sin but also about guarding inward desire. Lust is described as something that begins quietly, in the imagination and attention of the heart, long before it becomes action. This is not meant to create shame, but awareness: what we nurture internally eventually shapes how we treat others externally. Living right before God means choosing to see people not as objects for use, but as individuals made in His image, deserving of respect and dignity. This calls for intentional discipline—what we watch, dwell on, and allow to grow in our thoughts.

Jesus then speaks about marriage and faithfulness. Marriage is portrayed not as a casual arrangement, but as a sacred covenant that deserves protection and honor. Fidelity is more than physical loyalty; it is emotional commitment, consistency, and a willingness to remain devoted even when life becomes difficult. Living right before others means protecting trust and refusing to let selfish desire undermine what has been entrusted to us. It is in small daily acts of faithfulness that strong marriages are built—through patience, forgiveness, and perseverance.

Finally, Jesus addresses honesty in speech and the use of oaths. He challenges the need for elaborate promises, teaching instead that truth should be so central to our character that our simple word is enough. Integrity means that our “yes” is reliable and our “no” is clear. There is no manipulation, exaggeration, or double meaning. Living right before God includes speaking in a way that reflects His truthfulness—consistent, transparent, and trustworthy.

Together, these teachings form a picture of a whole life: a purified heart, a faithful commitment, and honest speech. They remind us that righteousness is not performed for display but lived from within. When the heart is aligned with God, it naturally produces faithful relationships and truthful words.

A devotional response to this passage might begin with reflection: What do I allow to shape my inner thoughts? Am I faithful in my commitments? Do my words reflect truth without needing embellishment? Prayer then becomes a request for God to transform not only actions but desires. And practice follows—choosing purity in thought, loyalty in relationships, and honesty in speech each day.

Discussion Questions:

  1. In Matthew 5:27–37, Jesus Christ emphasizes that righteousness begins in the heart. How can we practically guard our thoughts and desires so they align with God’s standards in everyday life?
  2. Jesus also teaches about honesty in speech, saying our “yes” should be yes and our “no” should be no. What are some ways we can grow in integrity so that our words and commitments become more trustworthy in our relationships?

LIVING A LIFE OF WORSHIP

“Worship is giving God the best that He has given you.” — Oswald Chambers.

Worship is far more than the songs we sing on Sunday morning. True worship is a daily lifestyle of honoring God with our hearts, minds, words, and actions. It is choosing to place God first in every area of life and responding to His goodness with gratitude, obedience, and love. Worship begins when we recognize who God is—holy, faithful, merciful, and worthy of all praise.

In The Book of Romans, believers are encouraged to present their lives as “a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God.” This reminds us that worship is not limited to a church building. Every moment can become an offering to God. The way we speak to others, the integrity we show at work, the kindness we extend to strangers, and the time we spend in prayer all reflect a heart of worship.

Living a life of worship also means trusting God during difficult seasons. It is easy to praise God when life is comfortable, but genuine worship continues even in hardship. When we choose faith over fear and thanksgiving over complaint, we declare that God is still worthy regardless of our circumstances. Worship shifts our focus from problems to God’s power and presence.

Jesus taught in The Gospel of John that true worshipers worship the Father “in spirit and in truth.” God desires sincere hearts, not empty routines. Worship is not about performance or appearance; it is about a real relationship with Him. A worshipful life grows from spending time in God’s Word, praying faithfully, and allowing the Holy Spirit to transform us daily.

Sometimes worship is expressed quietly through obedience. Forgiving someone who hurt you, serving others without recognition, or remaining faithful when no one is watching can all be acts of worship. These moments reveal our devotion to God more than words alone ever could.

Today, consider how you can make worship part of your everyday life. Begin your morning with thanksgiving. Speak words that honor Christ. Serve others with humility. Spend time in prayer even when life feels busy. Worship is not confined to music or special gatherings—it is a daily surrender to God.

May we live each day with hearts fully devoted to the Lord, giving Him glory in all we do.

                                   

Discussion Questions:

  1. What does it truly mean to live a life of worship beyond attending church services or singing songs?
  2. How can we honor God through our daily actions, attitudes, and relationships throughout the week?

THE SPIRITUAL WEIGHT OF SMALL THINGS

Then he said to the crowd, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross daily, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.” – Luke 9:23-24.

Most of life is lived in the ordinary.

Not on stages. Not in dramatic moments. Not during breakthroughs or spiritual highs. Life is usually made up of dishes washed, emails answered, children cared for, bills paid, errands run, conversations repeated, and responsibilities quietly carried. Because these moments seem small, we often assume they matter less to God.

But Scripture paints a different picture.

Before Moses stood before Pharaoh, he spent years tending sheep in obscurity. Before David wore a crown, he tended fields and carried food to his brothers. Jesus Himself spent most of His earthly life not preaching to crowds, but working quietly as a carpenter in Nazareth. The Son of God lived ordinary days.

That alone should change how we see everyday work.

We sometimes divide life into “spiritual” and “non-spiritual” categories. Worship feels sacred. Prayer feels sacred. Church feels sacred. But folding laundry? Responding kindly to difficult customers? Preparing meals? Showing up faithfully at a repetitive job? Those things can feel invisible and disconnected from God.

Yet the Bible repeatedly shows God meeting people in ordinary places: beside wells, on fishing boats, along roads, at dinner tables, in fields, and during daily labor. God seems remarkably comfortable entering normal human routines.

The world often celebrates visible impact, but the kingdom of God deeply values hidden faithfulness. A mother comforting a frightened child at 2 a.m., a janitor cleaning spaces no one notices, a worker choosing honesty when shortcuts would be easier, a caregiver patiently serving someone who cannot repay them — heaven does not overlook these things.

Sacred work is not defined by popularity. It is defined by presence.

God is present in ordinary obedience.

The sacredness of ordinary work is not found in the task itself, but in the God who sees it.

No faithful act offered to Him is ever wasted.

Discussion Questions

  1. Which ordinary responsibilities in your daily life do you struggle to see as spiritually meaningful, and why?
  2. How would your attitude toward work, chores, caregiving, or routine responsibilities change if you truly believed God was present in those moments?

WHY TRUTH MATTERS IN RELATIONSHIPS

“The LORD detests lying lips, but he delights in those who tell the truth.” – Proverbs 12:22

One of the quickest ways to damage a relationship is dishonesty. And one of the strongest ways to build a lasting relationship is honesty.

That sounds obvious, but honesty is harder than we like to admit. Sometimes we avoid telling the truth because we don’t want conflict. Sometimes we exaggerate because we want approval. Sometimes we hide things because we fear disappointment or rejection.

Most people don’t wake up one morning planning to become dishonest. Usually, it starts small. A carefully edited story. A hidden purchase. A half-truth. A “fine” when we are clearly not fine.

But relationships built on incomplete truth eventually become unstable. Trust begins to weaken. Conversations become guarded. People start wondering what is real and what isn’t.

Proverbs 12:22 says: “The LORD detests lying lips, but he delights in those who tell the truth.” Notice the emphasis on trustworthiness. Honesty is not simply about avoiding lies. It is about becoming the kind of person others can rely on.

Healthy relationships require safety. People need to know they can trust your words, your intentions, and your character. Without honesty, relationships become exhausting because everyone is forced to second-guess motives and question sincerity.

When we are honest, we no longer have to remember which version of the story we told. We don’t have to constantly manage appearances. We can live authentically instead of performing for others. Of course, honesty does not mean brutality. There is a difference between speaking truth and using truth as a weapon. Ephesians 4:15 says, “Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ.”

Sometimes the most loving thing we can do is have an honest conversation. A husband and wife may need to address hurt feelings before resentment grows. Friends may need to lovingly confront unhealthy behavior. Parents may need to admit mistakes and ask forgiveness from their children. Oddly enough, those honest moments often deepen relationships instead of damaging them.

Why? Because honesty communicates respect. It says, “I value this relationship enough to be truthful.” God honors that kind of integrity.

Every strong relationship—marriage, friendship, family, church, or workplace—is built brick by brick on trust. And trust is built through honesty practiced consistently over time.

Honesty may create uncomfortable moments occasionally, but dishonesty creates broken relationships eventually. Truth spoken with love has a way of building connections that last.

Discussion Questions:

  1. Why do you think honesty is sometimes difficult in close relationships, and what fears or insecurities often keep people from being fully truthful?
  2. Ephesians 4:15 tells us to speak “the truth in love.” What does that balance look like practically in marriages, friendships, families, or within the church?

HOW LOVING GOD TRANSFORMS OUR RELATIONSHIP

“God became man to turn creatures into sons: not simply to produce better people of the old kind but to produce a new kind of people.”—C.S. Lewis

One of the greatest misconceptions about relationships is the idea that the key to loving others well is simply trying harder. We tell ourselves that if we become more patient, more thoughtful, or more understanding, our relationships will naturally improve. While those things matter, Scripture teaches that truly meaningful relationships begin somewhere deeper: with loving God first.

Jesus made this clear when He said the greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength. Only after that did He say to love your neighbor as yourself. The order matters. Our ability to love others consistently is directly connected to our relationship with God.

The truth is, human love has limits. We get tired. We become frustrated. We hold grudges. We want our own way. Even in our closest relationships, selfishness has a way of quietly creeping in. That is why relationships built only on emotion, convenience, or shared interests often struggle when life becomes difficult. Feelings change. Circumstances change. People disappoint one another.

But when we genuinely love God, He begins shaping the way we love people. The more time we spend with Him, the more His character slowly becomes visible in us. We become more patient during conflict. More willing to forgive. More compassionate when someone is struggling. More humble when we are wrong. Loving God softens the sharp edges of pride and selfishness that damage relationships.

This does not happen overnight. Spiritual growth is usually slow and steady, much like the growth of a strong relationship itself. Day by day, God teaches us how to listen better, speak more gently, and care more deeply. Often, the biggest changes happen in small moments — choosing kindness during an argument, offering grace instead of criticism, praying for someone instead of becoming bitter toward them.

Meaningful relationships also require a shared foundation. When two people are both pursuing God, they are moving toward the same center. Their relationship gains stability because it is no longer built only on feelings or circumstances. It is anchored in something eternal. Even during seasons of hardship, disappointment, or grief, God provides strength that human effort alone cannot sustain.

Loving God also reminds us that relationships are gifts, not possessions. We stop trying to control people and instead begin serving them with gratitude and humility. We learn that love is not merely about being appreciated, understood, or affirmed. Often, love looks like sacrifice, patience, and faithfulness in ordinary everyday life.

The simple truth is this: the healthier our relationship with God becomes, the healthier our relationships with others can become. We love more deeply because we realize how deeply we ourselves are loved by Him. And when God’s love fills a heart, it naturally begins overflowing into the lives of others.

Discussion Questions:

  1. How does loving God first practically change the way we treat, communicate with, and respond to the people in our closest relationships?
  2. In what ways have you seen your relationships strengthen or struggle based on your spiritual life with God at that time?

THE QUIET STRENGTH OF A MOTHER

“Her children stand and bless her. Her husband praises her.” – Proverbs 31:28.

There’s something about Mother’s Day that makes us pause. Maybe it’s the flowers, the cards, or the annual panic purchase from the greeting card aisle that says, “To the World’s Greatest Mom,” even though you know your mother once threatened to pull the car over because you and your brother were arguing in the back seat.

Still, when we really stop and think about it, mothers carry a kind of quiet strength that often goes unnoticed until we’re older.

Most moms never asked for applause. They just kept showing up. They showed up at 2 a.m. when the kids were sick. They showed up for ballgames, concerts, science fairs, and emergency poster-board projects that somehow became family crises at 10 p.m. the night before they were due. They showed up during the hard seasons nobody else saw.

And in so many homes, mothers became the steady presence holding everything together with prayer, perseverance, and coffee. A lot of what mothers do reminds me of Galatians 6:9: “So let’s not get tired of doing what is good. At just the right time we will reap a harvest of blessing if we don’t give up.”

Because motherhood often feels repetitive. Laundry multiplies like a biblical plague. Groceries disappear within hours. Advice goes ignored until children become adults and suddenly repeat the exact same wisdom back to you as if they invented it. Yet through all of it, faithful mothers keep planting seeds. Seeds of kindness. Seeds of patience. Seeds of faith. And the beautiful thing is this: many of those seeds bloom years later.

Sometimes a mother never fully realizes the impact she had. She may feel ordinary. Unnoticed. Underappreciated. But God sees every sacrifice. He sees the meals cooked, the tears wiped away, the prayers whispered late at night, and the endless encouragement poured into children and grandchildren. None of it is wasted. The love of a godly mother leaves fingerprints on generations.

For many of us, some of our earliest pictures of God’s love came through a mother’s care. Through hugs after failure. Through forgiveness after bad decisions. Through patient encouragement, when we were convinced life was over because someone in middle school didn’t like us. Mothers often reflect the heart of Christ more than they realize—serving quietly, loving consistently, and giving even when they’re tired.

And on Mother’s Day, we celebrate that.

Not perfection.

Not flawless parenting.

Not homes that looked like magazine covers.

We celebrate love that stayed.

So today, if you are blessed to still have your mother, thank her. Call her. Hug her. Honor her strength, her faith, and her sacrifice.

Discussion Questions:

  1. In what ways have you seen the quiet faithfulness of a mother, grandmother, or spiritual mother shape lives over time—even in ordinary moments?
  2. Galatians 6:9 encourages us not to grow weary in doing good. What are some practical ways we can encourage and support mothers and caregivers who may feel exhausted or unnoticed today?