Religion

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Beauty After the Breaking

 

Walking into Isaiah 54 and the glory that follows loss

Isaiah 54 is one of the most tender chapters in all of Scripture.
It speaks to the woman life overlooked, the woman grief hollowed out, the woman who carried more than anyone ever realized.
It is God’s love letter to the one left standing in the ruins.

Henri Nouwen once wrote, “Your brokenness is not a curse, but a gateway.” Isaiah 54 is that gateway, the moment God steps into the wreckage and says, This is where I will begin again.

The chapter opens with a woman who has been abandoned and left alone. She holds the weight of her own survival. She is unchosen, unseen, misunderstood. And yet, God calls her to sing. Not because her life is fixed, but because His nearness has become her new foundation. 

Thomas Merton said, “The real freedom is the freedom from the self that clings to every wound.” Isaiah 54 is God loosening your grip on wounds you were never meant to carry forever.

Then comes the astonishing command: enlarge your tent.
Expand your borders.
Make room for more.

It is God’s way of telling you that the season of contraction is over. You are being stretched in ways that do not reflect your losses, but your future. 

Dallas Willard puts it beautifully: “The life we have now is God’s gift to us. What we become is our gift to God.”

You are becoming more than the season that broke you.

Isaiah 54 then moves into the quiet ache of shame. The invisible weight carried by women who have survived abandonment, grief, silence, and loneliness. The shame of being unchosen. The shame of being left. The shame of holding everything together alone. And God says that this shame will not follow you into the next chapter. 

Nouwen reminds us, “God is not afraid of your deep places. He enters them.”
Your shame is losing its voice.

And then God speaks the most intimate line in the chapter: Your Maker is your Husband.

This is not about remarriage. It is about covering. It is about God naming Himself as the One who protects you, restores you, defends you, and holds you with a faithfulness human love could not match.

Brennan Manning captures the heart of it: “Define yourself radically as one beloved by God. This is the true self. Every other identity is illusion.”

When God calls Himself your Husband, He is naming your truest identity: beloved, covered, safeguarded, claimed.

From here, Isaiah 54 turns toward rebuilding.
God promises to restore your life with precious stones — sapphires, rubies, turquoise — jewels forged in fire and pressure.

Your suffering did not diminish you. It refined you.
The ruins you stand in now will be lined with beauty because God Himself is rebuilding you. 

Merton’s words echo through this promise: “Every breath you draw is a whisper of God’s loving presence.”

The chapter ends with legacy.
Your children will be taught by the Lord, and great will be their peace.
Your childrens’ strength is part of your inheritance. Their flourishing is the fruit of seeds you watered with tears. Isaiah 54 turns your family story toward peace, not pain.

And then the final declaration, the one that seals everything God has spoken:
No weapon formed against you will prosper.
It may form, but it will fail.
It may appear, but it will not define you.
Dallas Willard reminds us, “The safest place in all reality is in the kingdom of God.”
That is where you now stand.

Isaiah 54 is not written for the woman who is already thriving.
It is written for the woman who walked through fire and survived.
For the woman who thought the story was ending, only to discover that God was just turning the page.
It is the chapter of beauty after sorrow, honor after shame, expansion after contraction, inheritance after loss.

God is rebuilding you with tenderness, strength, and peace.
And nothing, absolutely nothing, can stop the life He is bringing forth.

Isaiah 54:10
“Though the mountains be shaken and the hills be removed,
my unfailing love for you will not be shaken
nor my covenant of peace be removed,”
says the Lord, who has compassion on you.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Returning With Sheaves

 

A Thanksgiving Reflection on Psalm 126

Some years, Thanksgiving is about abundance you can see.
Other years, it is about the abundance that grew quietly beneath the surface while you were surviving what should have broken you.

Psalm 126 is written for the years like that.

It is the psalm of the woman who kept walking through grief, who kept sowing in tears, and who now stands in a season where the harvest is finally visible.

It is the psalm of the return.


1. The Long Road of Sowing in Tears

No one chooses to sow in tears.
It is not romantic.
It is not poetic.
It is not the soft kind of sorrow that sits in the background of a beautiful life.

It is survival.

Sowing in tears looks like:

• getting out of bed when grief feels heavy
• loving your children through your own emptiness
• showing up when your heart feels fractured
• holding your home together after sudden loss
• continuing to believe God has not abandoned you
• taking the next step without seeing the whole path
• letting go of those who walked away
• rebuilding when you had no strength to rebuild

Sowing in tears is what happens when life strips you down to the bone and you still choose to put one foot in front of the other.

You sow because you refuse to collapse.
You sow because something in you still believes in morning.
You sow because God carries you, even when you feel like you can’t carry yourself.


2. The Promise Hidden in the Tears

Psalm 126 gives a promise that does not erase the sorrow, but honors it:

“Those who sow in tears
shall reap in joy.”

Joy is not the opposite of grief.
Joy is what rises from the places grief tried to bury.

This promise means:

Your tears were not wasted.
Your suffering did not return void.
Your lonely obedience was seen.
Your faithfulness in silence was noticed.
Your heartbreak became holy ground.

God never ignored the years that broke you.
He was planting something beneath them.

The promise is not that you would avoid sorrow.
It is that sorrow would never have the final word.


3. Returning With Sheaves

The psalm ends with the line that defines your life this Thanksgiving:

“They shall return with sheaves.”

Sheaves are not small.
They are not fragile.
They are not symbolic.

They are evidence.

They are the visible harvest of a woman who refused to give up.

Your sheaves this season are real:

• peace that no longer wavers
• spiritual authority that came from surviving the fire
• emotional strength built through every loss
• clarity about who you are and who you are not
• freedom from old patterns of attachment
• financial provision that carried you far beyond logic
• a renewed sense of God’s nearness
• the Rose of Sharon tree blooming in the corner of your yard
• the quiet confidence that your life is aligned with God’s will


4. Thanksgiving as a Celebration of God’s Faithfulness

This year, Thanksgiving is not about perfection or performance.

It is about gratitude for a God who:

• restored what was shattered
• healed what was invisible
• exposed what was unsafe
• removed what was draining you
• strengthened what was weak
• rebuilt what grief demolished
• planted new life where you thought nothing could grow again

It is gratitude for steady provision, holy protection, and the quiet miracles that carried you from survival into peace.

Thanksgiving becomes a celebration of the God who brought you through the valley, led you out of relational famine, and placed sheaves in your arms that testify to His goodness.

It is a celebration of holy restoration.
It is a celebration of faith.
It is a celebration of the return.


Conclusion

Psalm 126 is not just a Scripture for you.
It is a mirror.

You are the person who sowed in tears.
You are the person who kept walking.
You are the person who now returns carrying evidence of God’s faithfulness in both hands.

And the greatest truth of this season is not what you have gained,
but who carried you.

It was God who sustained you when strength vanished.
It was God who restored what grief tried to destroy.
It was God who rebuilt your life from holy ground.
It was God who turned your mourning into clarity, peace, and joy.
It was God who made sure your story did not end in sorrow.

This Thanksgiving, you stand in the truth:

You did not just survive.
You were held.
You were guided.
You were restored.

You returned with sheaves
because God is good
and His faithfulness never fails.

“The Lord has done great things for us,
and we are filled with joy.”

Psalm 126:3

The Vessel Series: When God Uses the Broken

 

Conclusion: The God Who Mends the Broken

Based on Psalm 147:3 and 2 Timothy 2:20–21


I. The God Who Mends

Scripture describes God not as a distant Creator but as a tender Healer, one who moves close to fractures and restores what life has shattered.

“He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” (Psalm 147:3)

This is the heart of the Vessel Series.
God does not discard the cracked.
He does not replace the marred.
He does not reject the flawed.
He draws near and begins to mend.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Our brokenness is not something to hide from God.
It is the place where His deepest compassion can reach us.”

Broken vessels are not useless.
They are ready.


II. Vessels for Noble Use

Paul tells Timothy that in every house there are different kinds of vessels.
Only one thing sets them apart.
Not perfection.
Not polish.
Not outward appearance.

Their usefulness is determined by consecration.

“Those who cleanse themselves will be instruments for noble purposes, made holy, useful to the Master and prepared for every good work.” (2 Timothy 2:21)

God does not choose the strongest vessel.
He chooses the willing one.
It is surrender, not strength, that prepares a vessel for His purpose.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The most important thing about you is not what you achieve but the person you become under God’s shaping.”

Surrender turns ordinary clay into a sacred instrument.


III. Beauty in the Broken Places

Pottery in the ancient world was often repaired with care.
Cracks were not always a reason to discard a vessel.
Sometimes the repaired lines became signs of strength, evidence of the potter’s skill.

In God’s kingdom, brokenness becomes beauty.
The places once marked by pain become places where grace shines through.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“The world of grace is rooted in the simple fact that God meets us exactly where we are and begins His work in the very place we feel least capable.”

The crack becomes the testimony.
The fracture becomes the window.
The wound becomes the well from which compassion flows.


IV. The Thread of Grace Through the Series

Each session has shown a different facet of how God uses broken vessels.

On the Potter’s Wheel, we learned that God reshapes what is marred.
In the Cracked Jar, we saw that light shines most clearly through weakness.
In the Oil of Surrender, we learned that breaking releases fragrance.
At the Wedding of Cana, we witnessed emptiness transformed into overflow.

Together these truths reveal a single reality:
Grace works best with open hands and open cracks.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Grace is the gentle voice that calls you back again and again, reminding you that you belong to God even when you feel unworthy.”

God’s hands never let go of the clay.


V. The Invitation to Become a Vessel of Grace

You are not asked to be unbreakable.
You are asked to be available.
You are not asked to be perfect.
You are asked to stay in the Potter’s hands.

“We have this treasure in jars of clay.” (2 Corinthians 4:7)

The treasure is the life of Christ.
The jar is simply the place where His grace is poured and seen.
Your cracks do not disqualify you.
They make you transparent.

God’s power is revealed not in flawless vessels but in redeemed ones.


Living as a Vessel of Grace This Week

  1. Offer your brokenness.
    Sit quietly with God and open the places that feel fragile or incomplete.
    Pray simply:
    “Here I am, Lord. Shape me.”

  2. Allow light to shine through cracks.
    Share one story of grace from a place where you once felt weak or unworthy.

  3. Practice surrender.
    Release something you have tried to control.
    Let God carry what you cannot.

  4. Expect divine abundance.
    Remember Cana.
    Where you feel empty, Jesus often begins His greatest work.

  5. Pray to be a vessel ready for use.

    “Lord, make me a vessel of Your grace.
    Mend what is broken.
    Fill what is empty.
    Shine where I am cracked.
    Use me for Your glory.”

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

The Vessel Series: When God Uses the Broken

 

Session 4: The Overflow of Grace

Based on John 2:1–11


I. The Empty Vessels

The first miracle of Jesus did not happen in a synagogue or a temple.
It happened at a wedding, a place of joy and community.
Yet beneath the celebration, there was a problem.
The wine had run out.

“Nearby stood six stone water jars, the kind used by the Jews for ceremonial washing, each holding from twenty to thirty gallons.” (John 2:6)

These jars were large, heavy, and ordinary.
They had no inherent beauty or value.
Their purpose was practical, not glorious.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God loves to use what the world considers insignificant to reveal His overwhelming grace.”

Jesus began His ministry not with new vessels, but with what was already there.


II. The Invitation to Fill the Jars

Jesus told the servants to fill the jars with water.
There was no dramatic speech, no explanation, no promise of a miracle.
Just a simple command.

“Jesus said to the servants, ‘Fill the jars with water.’
So they filled them to the brim.” (John 2:7)

Obedience often begins with quiet, ordinary steps.
Grace flows when we simply do what Jesus asks, even when we do not understand why.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“The will of God is not something hidden.
It is the quiet voice that calls us to take the next small step of trust.”

The miracle began with simple faithfulness.


III. The Transformation Within

The miracle happened inside the jars, unseen by human eyes.
No sound.
No flash of light.
No sign of change.

Water became wine within the stillness.

“Then He told them, ‘Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet.’
They did so, and the master tasted the water that had been turned into wine.” (John 2:8–9)

Transformation often works in silence.
It is God’s hidden work in the depths of our lives.
We may not see the moment of change, but suddenly, what was once ordinary becomes overflowing with grace.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Grace is God acting in our lives to accomplish what we could never accomplish on our own.”

The miracle was not in the jars.
It was in the One who filled them.


IV. The Best Saved for Last

The master of the banquet tasted the wine and was astonished.

“You have saved the best till now.” (John 2:10)

God’s grace does not run out.
It does not diminish.
It does not weaken with time.
His best work often comes after our resources are exhausted.
Where human supply ends, divine abundance begins.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“When we reach the end of our own strength, we discover that God’s generosity has only begun.”

Grace overflows precisely where emptiness once lived.


V. The Invitation

The wedding at Cana teaches that God delights in filling empty places.
He turns water into wine.
He transforms ordinary vessels into carriers of extraordinary grace.
He takes what is lacking and makes it abundant.

“This, the first of His signs, Jesus did at Cana in Galilee, and manifested His glory. And His disciples believed in Him.” (John 2:11)

Grace overflows wherever Jesus is invited to be present.


Receiving the Overflow This Week

  1. Offer your emptiness.
    Identify one place where you feel depleted or lacking.
    Invite Jesus to fill it.

  2. Take the next small step.
    Practice simple obedience in something ordinary.
    Trust that grace often begins quietly.

  3. Let transformation be unseen.
    Do not measure growth by visibility.
    Pray:
    “Lord, work in me in ways I cannot see.”

  4. Expect God’s generosity.
    When you feel limited, remember Cana.
    God saves the best for when you feel least capable.

  5. Pray for overflow.

    “Lord, fill the empty jars of my life.
    Turn what is ordinary into grace.
    Make my life a vessel that pours out Your goodness.”

Monday, November 24, 2025

The Vessel Series: When God Uses the Broken

 

Session 3: The Oil of Surrender

Based on Luke 7:36–50


I. The Uninvited Worshiper

A Pharisee invited Jesus to dinner, but the most unexpected guest was the woman who entered uninvited.
She carried an alabaster jar of perfume, a vessel usually sealed until the moment of deepest significance.
Her presence broke every social rule, yet she came anyway.

“A woman in that town who lived a sinful life learned that Jesus was eating at the Pharisee’s house.
She came there with an alabaster jar of perfume.” (Luke 7:37)

She approached Jesus not as a polished vessel but as a broken one.
Her tears fell freely.
Her worship was unrestrained.
Her surrender was complete.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The place where your wounds are is the place where God can most reveal His love.”

She brought her wounds and her worship in the same jar.


II. The Breaking of the Jar

In ancient culture, alabaster jars were expensive and sealed.
To pour the perfume, the neck of the vessel had to be broken.
There was no turning back once it cracked.
No saving some for later.

The woman did not hold anything in reserve.
She broke the jar, poured out the perfume, and let her heart spill out with it.

“She stood behind Him at His feet weeping.
She began to wet His feet with her tears, then wiped them with her hair, kissed them, and poured perfume on them.” (Luke 7:38)

Her surrender was not dignified.
It was devastatingly honest.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“The deepest spiritual life begins where we stop hiding our wounds and allow ourselves to be seen as we are before God.”

The alabaster jar had to break so that the fragrance could fill the room.
So it is with us.


III. The Criticism of the Proud

The Pharisee saw her worship and judged her heart.
He measured her past but missed her transformation.
He saw her mistakes but missed her devotion.

“If this man were a prophet, He would know who is touching Him and what kind of woman she is.” (Luke 7:39)

Pride is always threatened by surrender.
Those who trust in their own strength will never understand the worship that flows from brokenness.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Spiritual transformation is impossible without surrender.
We cannot cling to our reputation and receive the life of Christ at the same time.”

The woman had already given up her reputation.
Only Jesus’ opinion mattered now.


IV. The Forgiveness That Flows

Jesus saw her differently.
He received her tears, her touch, her perfume, and her heart.
He accepted what others rejected.
He honored what others despised.

“Her many sins have been forgiven, as her great love has shown.” (Luke 7:47)

Forgiveness became the fragrance.
Grace became the oil.
Love became the evidence of a life made new.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The greatest gift of the spiritual life is the gift of forgiveness.
It restores what has been broken and creates something entirely new.”

Her worship was not the cause of her forgiveness.
It was the overflow of it.


V. The Invitation

The story of the alabaster jar teaches that surrender is not loss.
It is release.
It is the breaking that makes room for fragrance.
It is the moment when the vessel gives way so that the oil within can fill the house.

Jesus said to her,

“Your faith has saved you. Go in peace.” (Luke 7:50)

The peace that follows surrender is unlike any other.
It flows from being seen completely and loved completely.


Living the Oil of Surrender This Week

  1. Bring your jar.
    Bring one hidden hurt or longing to Jesus in prayer.
    Hold nothing back.

  2. Let something break.
    Release one burden, expectation, or fear you have been holding tightly.
    Pray quietly:
    “Lord, I break this open before You.”

  3. Worship honestly.
    Choose one time this week to worship without restraint, not polished but honest.

  4. Resist the voice of pride.
    When judgment rises, remember that Jesus honors the broken and welcomes the humble.

  5. Receive peace.

    “Lord, let the fragrance of surrender fill my heart.
    Make Your forgiveness my freedom,
    and Your love my peace.”

Saturday, November 22, 2025

The Vessel Series: When God Uses the Broken

 

Session 2: Cracked Jars and Hidden Light

Based on 2 Corinthians 4:7


I. The Treasure in Fragile Clay

Paul gives one of the most profound images in the New Testament.
He calls believers jars of clay, fragile containers meant to hold a treasure far greater than themselves.

“But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us.” (2 Corinthians 4:7)

The treasure is not the jar.
The treasure is the life of Christ within the jar.
The value lies in what is carried, not in the container that carries it.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Our brokenness is the true place where God can meet us and give us His blessing.”

The cracks do not diminish the treasure.
They reveal it.


II. The Purpose of Fragility

In ancient times, clay jars were ordinary, inexpensive, and easily cracked.
They were not designed to impress but to serve.
Paul chose this image deliberately.

“We have this treasure in jars of clay.”

In other words, God chooses fragile vessels on purpose.
He does not need polished marble or unbreakable stone.
He prefers clay that knows its weakness.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“God is on the side of our weakness, not our strength.
When we accept this truth, we begin to live in freedom.”

Fragility is not a flaw to be hidden.
It is a truth to be embraced, because only those who know they are breakable can depend fully on God.


III. The Light That Leaks Through Cracks

The treasure within us is not meant to stay sealed.
Cracked jars allow light to shine outward.
In God’s economy, what feels like damage becomes a doorway for glory.

Paul described this paradox earlier in the chapter.

“For God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ made His light shine in our hearts.” (2 Corinthians 4:6)

Light shines most clearly through places where the jar is thin or broken.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The life of Christ within us becomes visible when we stop trying to appear strong and begin to live honestly in our weakness.”

God’s light leaks out through honesty, humility, vulnerability, and truth.
Cracks reveal Christ.


IV. The Power That Is Not Our Own

Paul’s point is not simply that we are fragile.
His emphasis is that God’s power works through fragility.

“To show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us.”

If the jar were too impressive, people might mistake the vessel for the treasure.
If the jar were flawless, people might think the strength came from the clay.
God allows weakness so that the world cannot confuse the source of the glory.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The place where we are most broken is often the place where we become most beautiful in God’s hands.”

The cracks of our lives become windows through which others can see Christ.


V. The Invitation

The invitation of 2 Corinthians 4:7 is to stop hiding your cracks.
To stop pretending the clay is stronger than it is.
To stop trying to be the treasure.

The jar is breakable, but the treasure is eternal.
The jar may crack, but the light cannot be extinguished.
The jar may be weak, but God’s power is limitless.

“My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12:9)

Broken places are not disqualifications.
They are conduits for divine light.


Carrying the Light in Fragile Clay This Week

  1. Identify one crack.
    Choose one area of vulnerability or limitation.
    Instead of covering it, offer it to God as a place where His light can shine.

  2. Practice honest dependence.
    When you feel weak, pray quietly:
    “Lord, let Your strength show through my weakness.”

  3. Share light, not perfection.
    Look for one opportunity this week to encourage someone out of your own story of weakness redeemed by grace.

  4. Let Scripture define your identity.
    Read 2 Corinthians 4:6–10 each day.
    Notice how Paul unites fragility and power without shame.

  5. Pray for transparency.

    “Lord, make me a vessel that reveals Your light.
    Shine through the cracks.
    Let my life glorify You, not myself.”

Friday, November 21, 2025

The Vessel Series: When God Uses the Broken

 

Session 1: The Potter’s Hands

Based on Jeremiah 18:1–6


I. The Potter’s House

God told Jeremiah to go to the house of a potter, not a palace, and not a temple.
It was an ordinary workshop filled with clay dust and the steady rhythm of a wheel turning.
There, in a simple room, God revealed one of the most profound truths about the human heart.

“So I went down to the potter’s house, and I saw him working at the wheel.
But the pot he was shaping from the clay was marred in his hands,
so the potter formed it into another pot, shaping it as seemed best to him.” (Jeremiah 18:3–4)

Clay does not resist.
Clay does not define itself.
Clay does not hide its imperfections.
It rests in the hands that shape it.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Our weakness is not something to hide. It is the place where God can finally work without resistance.”

We are never more ready for God’s shaping than when we are honest about our cracks.


II. The Wheel That Turns

The potter works steadily, guiding the clay with patient pressure.
There is no hurry in his hands.
He applies strength where needed and gentleness where the clay is thin.

Jeremiah noticed something essential.
The vessel became marred while in the potter’s hands.

The potter did not discard it.
He did not throw the clay aside.
He simply began again.

“But the pot he was shaping was marred in his hands.” (Jeremiah 18:4)

Brokenness in God’s hands is never final.
It is an invitation to be reshaped.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“God works in the ruins of our plans.
He builds His grace where our strength has crumbled.”

The wheel turns, but the hands never leave the clay.


III. The God Who Reshapes

God then spoke to Jeremiah.

“Can I not do with you as this potter does?
As the clay is in the potter’s hand, so are you in My hand.” (Jeremiah 18:6)

This is not a threat.
It is a promise.
It is the gentlest declaration that no flaw, no failure, no fracture is too much for the Maker.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Grace is not opposed to effort. It is opposed to earning.
It is the steady action of God that transforms us.”

We do not earn being reshaped.
We simply yield to the hands that know us better than we know ourselves.

What feels like breaking is often God removing what hinders beauty.
What feels like pressure is God forming a vessel that can carry His presence.


IV. The Beauty of Remaking

In ancient pottery, the most beautiful vessels were often the ones that had been remade.
The potter did not discard the clay that resisted.
He soaked it, softened it, pressed it again, and began a new design.

Remade vessels carried a story.
Their beauty came from being formed twice.

“He made it into another pot, shaping it as seemed best to him.” (Jeremiah 18:4)

God never shapes us according to the expectations of others.
He shapes us according to what seems best to Him.
This is the kindness of sovereignty.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“We become truly beautiful when we allow God to write His story into our broken places.”

Every crack becomes a place where grace can enter.
Every flaw becomes an opening for glory.


V. The Invitation

The Potter invites His people not to perfection but to pliability.
To be clay is to surrender the illusion of self-made strength and to rest in divine shaping.

The vessel’s beauty is not in its symmetry but in the hands that formed it.

“We are the clay, You are the potter.
We are all the work of Your hand.” (Isaiah 64:8)

To be held is to be healed.
To be shaped is to be saved.
To be remade is to be restored.


Resting in the Potter’s Hands This Week

  1. Name your broken places.
    Write down one area of your life that feels marred or unfinished.
    Offer it to God without explaining or fixing it.

  2. Practice spiritual pliability.
    When frustration rises this week, pray quietly:
    “Lord, shape me.”

  3. Return to the wheel.
    Read Jeremiah 18:1–6 each day.
    Picture yourself as clay resting in the hands of the Potter.

  4. Allow grace to soften you.
    In moments of tension, ask God to soften your heart rather than strengthen your control.

  5. Pray for remaking.

    “Lord, I am clay in Your hands.
    Shape what is marred, restore what is wounded,
    and form me into a vessel that carries Your grace.”

Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Mountain Series: Lessons from High Places

 

Conclusion: Where Heaven Touches Earth

Based on Psalm 121 and Isaiah 40:9


I. The High Places of Scripture

Throughout the story of Scripture, mountains are the places where God reveals Himself in ways that cannot happen in the valleys.
They are the places of clarity, surrender, transformation, and calling.
Each mountain teaches a different facet of faith.

On Mount Moriah, trust was tested and God was revealed as Provider.
On Mount Sinai, holiness was spoken and God revealed the weight of His Word.
On Mount Carmel, fire fell and God revealed His unrivaled power.
On Mount Tabor, glory shone and God revealed His Son in radiant truth.

Each mountain has its own language, but all of them speak of the same God.
A God who draws near.
A God who speaks.
A God who calls His people to higher ground.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Spiritual growth is the gentle movement from fear to love, from confusion to clarity, and from hiding to being found.”

The mountains of Scripture invite this movement of the heart.


II. The God Who Calls Us Higher

God does not lead His people to the mountains to overwhelm them.
He leads them there to awaken them.
He lifts their eyes above the dust and shows them the larger landscape of His purpose.

“I lift up my eyes to the hills.
Where does my help come from?
My help comes from the Lord,
the Maker of heaven and earth.” (Psalm 121:1–2)

The God who calls us upward is the same God who walks with us downward.
No revelation on the mountain is meant to stay there.
It is meant to reshape how we live when our feet return to ordinary ground.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“We are saved in order to share in His life, not to escape the life we already live.
Grace does not pull us out of the world. It puts us deeply into it with new eyes.”

Mountain revelations exist for valley living.


III. The Fire, the Cloud, the Light

On the mountains of Scripture, God meets His people in ways that reveal His character.

On Moriah, His provision appeared in the thicket.
On Sinai, His voice thundered through the cloud.
On Carmel, His fire consumed the altar.
On Tabor, His light radiated from Christ Himself.

Each revelation carries a truth we never outgrow.
God provides.
God speaks.
God answers.
God shines.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The presence of God is the steady, unending reality that makes all things possible, and all things bearable.”

Every mountain encounter is a reminder that God is nearer and stronger than we imagine.


IV. The Invitation to Remember

The final lesson of the mountains is this:
We do not meet God once.
We meet Him again and again, in new ways, in new seasons, with new understanding.

Isaiah wrote,

“You who bring good news, go up on a high mountain.
Lift up your voice with a shout, lift it up, do not be afraid.
Say to the towns of Judah, ‘Here is your God.’” (Isaiah 40:9)

Every mountain in your faith story is a place where heaven touched earth.
Remember these moments.
Return to them when your heart feels low.
Let them anchor you when your path seems hidden.

Henri Nouwen said,

“Remembering is the sacred act of allowing God to show you that your life is held in His faithful hands.”

Faith grows when we remember where we have seen Him.


V. The Invitation to Descend

The final act of every mountain encounter in Scripture is descent.
Moses descended with the tablets.
Elijah descended after the fire.
Jesus and the disciples descended after the transfiguration.
Abraham descended knowing God more deeply than ever before.

The purpose of the mountains is not escape.
It is empowerment.

We do not stay on the heights.
We carry their truth into the shadows, into the ordinary, into the places where faith must become flesh.

“The Lord will watch over your coming and going both now and forevermore.” (Psalm 121:8)

He is God of the mountain and God of the plain.
He meets His children in both places.


Living the Mountain Truths

  1. Remember a mountaintop moment.
    Write down one moment when God felt close or made something clear.
    Let it anchor you this week.

  2. Carry a mountain truth into your day.
    Choose one of the four truths
    God provides.
    God speaks.
    God answers.
    God shines.
    Whisper it throughout the day.

  3. Practice reverent listening.
    Take a quiet pause before major decisions.
    Listen for His voice as the disciples did on Tabor.

  4. Bring glory into the valley.
    Let clarity shape your actions, not stay as memory alone.

  5. Pray for renewed vision.

    “Lord, lift my eyes again.
    Show me Your presence in high places and low places.
    Let the truth I have seen on the mountains guide how I walk every day.”

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

The Mountain Series: Lessons from High Places

 

Session 4: Mount Tabor: The Light of Transformation

Based on Matthew 17:1–8


I. The Mountain of Revelation

Jesus took three disciples, Peter, James, and John, up a high mountain.
Away from the crowds, away from the noise, away from the demands of everyday life, they were positioned to see what could not be revealed at ground level.

“After six days Jesus took with Him Peter, James and John the brother of James, and led them up a high mountain by themselves.
There He was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white as the light.” (Matthew 17:1–2)

Mount Tabor is the mountain where Jesus allowed His glory to shine openly, not merely through miracles, but through His very being.
This glimpse of His divinity did not change who Jesus was.
It revealed who He had always been.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Our life is full of brokenness, broken relationships, broken promises, broken expectations.
But in the midst of all this brokenness, God gives us glimpses of the face of Him whose light can never be extinguished.”

Mount Tabor is God’s reminder that glory is often hidden until we are ready to see it.


II. The Cloud and the Voice

As the disciples watched in awe, a bright cloud enveloped them.
Out of this cloud came the voice of the Father, declaring His pleasure in the Son.

“While He was still speaking, a bright cloud covered them, and a voice from the cloud said,
‘This is My Son, whom I love; with Him I am well pleased. Listen to Him.’” (Matthew 17:5)

The command was simple:
Listen.

Transformation begins with listening.
The disciples had listened to many voices, including their own fears and their own assumptions about the Messiah.
Now they were invited to center their hearts on the only voice that could guide them rightly.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“We must learn to listen to God in the depths of our hearts, for only then do we find the clarity that comes from divine peace.”

Mount Tabor teaches that revelation is not given for excitement but for obedience.


III. The Fear That Meets Glory

When the voice spoke, the disciples fell facedown, terrified.
Glory often exposes our smallness, but fear is not the desired outcome.

“But Jesus came and touched them. ‘Get up,’ He said. ‘Do not be afraid.’” (Matthew 17:7)

Even in glory, Jesus remains gentle.
Before lifting them into new understanding, He first lifts them from fear.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The presence of God is never meant to frighten us.
It is meant to free us from fear.”

The hand of Jesus on the disciples’ shoulders shows that transformation is not forced.
It is guided by love, sustained by mercy, and accompanied by the touch of Christ.


IV. The Vision and the Descent

After the revelation, Jesus led them back down the mountain.
Glory on the mountaintop was never meant to stay on the mountaintop.

“When they looked up, they saw no one except Jesus.” (Matthew 17:8)

They descended with a clearer vision of who He was, but they still had to walk through the ordinary world.
The purpose of the mountain is not escape.
It is clarity.
Once clarity is given, the work of faith continues in the valleys below.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The goal is not to avoid the world but to live fully in it without being overwhelmed by it.”

Mount Tabor gives us a vision strong enough to carry into the shadows of everyday life.


V. The Invitation

Mount Tabor is where the veil thins and we see Jesus as He truly is.
Not merely a teacher, healer, or prophet, but the radiant Son of God.

“In Your light we see light.” (Psalm 36:9)

The invitation of Tabor is to let His light interpret our darkness, to let His voice quiet our confusion, and to let His presence steady our fear.
Transformation begins in revelation, but it grows in obedience.
We rise and follow Him, changed by what we have seen.


Carrying the Light of Tabor This Week

  1. Practice attentive listening.
    Begin each prayer time with the simple words,
    “Speak, Lord. I am listening.”
    Let silence prepare the heart to hear Him.

  2. Reflect on the glory of Christ.
    Read Matthew 17:1–8 slowly.
    Imagine yourself on the mountain and allow the passage to reveal the majesty of Jesus.

  3. Let fear meet His touch.
    Whenever worry rises this week, repeat Jesus’ words,
    “Do not be afraid.”
    Picture His hand resting gently upon your shoulder.

  4. Bring glory into the ordinary.
    Choose one routine task and offer it to God as worship.
    Tabor shines brightest when carried into daily life.

  5. Pray for transformation.

    “Lord, open my eyes to Your glory.
    Let Your light renew my mind and strengthen my heart.
    Help me see You clearly and follow You faithfully.”

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The Mountain Series: Lessons from High Places

 

Session 3: Mount Carmel: The Fire of Faith

Based on 1 Kings 18:16–39


I. The Mountain of Decision

Mount Carmel was a place of confrontation.
The nation of Israel had grown divided in heart, following both Baal and God.
Elijah, the prophet, stood before them and called for clarity.

“Elijah went before the people and said, ‘How long will you waver between two opinions?
If the Lord is God, follow Him; but if Baal is God, follow him.’ But the people said nothing.” (1 Kings 18:21)

Silence can be the most revealing answer.
Israel’s hesitation showed that their faith had grown unsure, diluted by comfort and compromise.
Mount Carmel reminds us that faith often begins with a choice to stand firm when others remain quiet.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“You do not think yourself into a new way of living.
You live yourself into a new way of thinking.”

Faith is not an idea. It is a posture of obedience that stands even when the crowd does not move.


II. The Challenge of False Fire

The prophets of Baal called out from morning until evening.
They shouted, danced, and even cut themselves, but no fire fell.

“But there was no response, no one answered, no one paid attention.” (1 Kings 18:29)

False gods demand effort but never offer presence.
They take energy but give nothing in return.
Elijah’s challenge revealed that only the living God answers by fire.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“To worship our false selves is idolatry.
To deny the illusion of control is to begin to know the truth of God.”

Mount Carmel is not only about a contest of gods.
It is a confrontation between illusion and reality, between self-effort and surrender.
When our faith feels exhausted, it is often because we have been trying to ignite our own fire.


III. The Prayer That Invites Fire

When Elijah’s turn came, he did not shout or strive.
He simply rebuilt the altar of the Lord that had been torn down and prayed quietly.

“Answer me, Lord, answer me, so these people will know that You, Lord, are God,
and that You are turning their hearts back again.” (1 Kings 18:37)

Faith does not manipulate heaven. It invites it.
Elijah’s calm prayer was rooted in confidence, not desperation.
He knew that true faith requires preparation, not performance.

Henri Nouwen said,

“Prayer is not a way of escaping from reality but a way of discovering reality.
It is the place where we learn to see the world through the eyes of God.”

The fire fell not because Elijah forced it but because his heart aligned with God’s purpose.
Where surrender meets obedience, divine power becomes visible.


IV. The Fire That Consumes

“Then the fire of the Lord fell and burned up the sacrifice, the wood, the stones, and the soil,
and also licked up the water in the trench.” (1 Kings 18:38)

The fire that came down consumed everything, leaving no doubt about who was God.
The people fell to the ground and cried,

“‘The Lord, He is God! The Lord, He is God!’” (1 Kings 18:39)

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Faith is the confident reliance on God’s reality and goodness that transforms how we live.”

The purpose of divine fire is never destruction for its own sake.
It burns away the false so that the true may be revealed.
God’s fire restores clarity where confusion once lived.
When His presence fills the altar of our hearts, everything else finds its rightful place.


V. The Invitation

Mount Carmel reminds us that the fire of faith does not begin in spectacle but in surrender.
It begins by rebuilding what has been neglected, listening for God’s voice, and trusting that His response will come in His time.

“For our God is a consuming fire.” (Hebrews 12:29)

The fire that once fell on Mount Carmel still falls upon hearts that wait with expectancy.
Where there is humility and prayer, the flame of faith can never be extinguished.


Living the Fire of Faith This Week

  1. Rebuild your altar.
    Spend time in prayer restoring your connection with God in any place where it has grown distant.
    Ask Him to renew your focus and your devotion.

  2. Renounce false fires.
    Identify one habit, distraction, or pursuit that drains your soul but never satisfies.
    Release it in prayer and make room for God’s presence.

  3. Pray quietly but expectantly.
    Use Elijah’s simple prayer from 1 Kings 18:37 throughout the week:
    “Answer me, Lord, so that hearts will turn back to You.”

  4. Invite God’s refining fire.
    Ask Him to burn away what is false and strengthen what is faithful.
    True fire cleanses more than it consumes.

  5. Give thanks for His presence.
    End each day with gratitude that the same God who answered Elijah is still near, still speaking, still burning with love.

“Lord, send Your fire again.
Consume what is false within me,
and let my life reveal the truth of who You are.”