Religion

Saturday, March 14, 2026

The Day After Survival

 

When God Meets Exhaustion with Bread and Sleep

A reflection on 1 Kings 19:5–8

Part of the "Learning to Live Again" series: reflections on faith and the quiet work of rebuilding life after survival.

If goodness and mercy truly follow our lives rather than harm, then the day after survival carries its own kind of grace.

Some moments of survival arrive loudly.

Sirens.
Phone calls.
Decisions made quickly because there is no time to hesitate.

Other moments arrive more quietly, when the danger has already passed but the body has not yet understood that it is safe to stop.

The crisis ends.
The room grows still.
Strength that carried you through begins to drain away.

What remains is a kind of collapse, the exhaustion that follows survival.

Not failure.
Not weakness.

Simply the body remembering what it carried.

Scripture makes room for that moment.

The story of Elijah in the wilderness unfolds after courage has already been required and faith has already been tested. The prophet who stood firm the day before now lies beneath a tree, emptied of strength.

The scene is surprisingly gentle.

No correction arrives.
No new command interrupts his rest.

Instead, God meets exhaustion with something simpler.

Bread.
Water.
Sleep.

An angel wakes him only long enough to eat.

Then Elijah lies down again.

The rhythm feels almost domestic in its tenderness.

Rest.
Nourishment.
Sleep again.

Heaven does not rush him forward.

The soul often expects that after survival comes immediate clarity.

A new mission.
A renewed sense of direction.
A sudden return of strength.

Yet the story unfolds differently.

Before any future appears, the body is allowed to recover.

The journey, the angel says, is too great for you.

Those words carry more compassion than instruction.

Too great for you.

Not a rebuke.

A recognition of human limits.

The God who formed the body does not treat exhaustion as a moral problem. He treats it as something that deserves care.

Sacred work disguised as ordinary care.

Bread warmed on coals.
Water placed within reach.

Nothing elaborate.
Nothing dramatic.

Just the quiet provision needed for the next breath and the next small step.

A culture shaped by urgency often grows uncomfortable with this kind of tenderness.

We celebrate resilience.
We admire endurance.
We praise the ones who keep moving.

Collapse makes us uneasy.

Yet Scripture holds this moment without embarrassment.

A prophet sleeps under a tree while heaven prepares breakfast.

No disappointment hangs in the air.

Only patience.
Only care.

Many people quietly carry the belief that spiritual strength should override physical limits. Faith should push through exhaustion. Devotion should rise above human need.

But the God of Elijah does not bypass the body.

He ministers to it.

Food before instruction.
Rest before revelation.

Healing begins in places that rarely receive applause.

A meal eaten slowly.

Water that steadies a trembling system.

Sleep that arrives like mercy.

These are not distractions from spiritual life.

They are part of it.

The soul does not float above the body. It lives inside it.

When the body is depleted, restoration must begin there.

When Bread and Sleep Become Grace

The nervous system loosens gradually.

Breath deepens without effort.
Shoulders lower a fraction.
Thoughts move more slowly.

Attention widens enough to notice the ground again.

Recovery rarely looks dramatic.

It often unfolds through quiet, ordinary moments.

A meal finished without hurry.

A long breath taken without bracing.

A stretch of time when nothing urgent demands your strength.

These moments can appear insignificant to the outside world.

Yet something sacred is taking place.

The body is remembering safety.

I know this quiet now, after carrying more than I could.

The quiet that arrives when effort finally loosens its grip.

In Elijah’s story, nourishment comes twice.

The angel returns a second time with the same instruction.

Arise and eat.

Because the journey is too great for you.

Not because Elijah failed.

Because he is human.

Care returns before calling.

Strength returns before direction.

Sometimes we expect God to meet us through answers.

Yet often He meets us through something simpler.

A meal.

A pause.

Permission to lie down again.

When survival has taken everything out of you, the next step may not be bravery.

It may be rest.

And rest, in this story, carries no shame.

The wilderness does not become holy because Elijah performs well there. It becomes holy because heaven tends to him.

God does not stand at a distance waiting for the prophet to recover his composure.

He draws near through ordinary care.

Bread on coals.

Water at his head.

Sleep beneath a tree.

Grace often arrives through the most elemental forms of provision.

Enough food.
Enough quiet.
Enough time for the body to remember how to breathe without bracing.

Eventually Elijah will rise.

Eventually the journey will continue.

But that moment does not arrive through pressure.

It comes after restoration.

After nourishment.

After the body gathers strength again.

And when rising comes,
grace will be beneath you.

Enough for the next step.
Enough for the road ahead.

***************


This reflection continues the Learning to Live Again series, which began with The Future Is Not Hunting You and explores how faith restores the body and soul after seasons of survival and exhaustion.

If this reflection resonated, these pieces continue the same quiet thread:

The Future Is Not Hunting You
Sung Over
The Holiness of Ordinary Hours

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The Holiness of Ordinary Hours


Finding God in the work no one applauds
but love quietly sustains

Most of life doesn’t unfold in crescendos.

It moves through quiet middle spaces,
where no one is applauding
and nothing feels remarkable.

A basket of laundry waits on the bed.
The sink fills again, warm water clouding the air.
The car hums along a quiet stretch of road.
Errands stack. Meals repeat. Another small thing arrives.

We’re trained to look for God in the spectacular,
in breakthroughs,
in mountaintops,
in moments that announce themselves as sacred.

Yet the soul rarely lives on mountaintops.

Its home is in kitchens and minivans,
waiting rooms and grocery lines,
in the steady repetition of care
that quietly holds a life together.

Scripture whispers what we forget:

God is there too.


Laundry, folded slowly, can become prayer.

Not because the task impresses anyone,
but because love is woven into the doing.

Small shirts smoothed flat.
Warm towels folded fresh from the dryer, steam rising into stillness.
Familiar fabric held for a quiet breath.

This is more than clothing.
It is the texture of shared life.

“Whatever you do, do it with all your heart.”

Even here. Especially here.

Work begins to feel sacred
when love is what carries it
for people entrusted to your hands.

No spotlight.
No recognition.
Just quiet faithfulness stitching a home together.

And this counts, even if no one sees it.

Daily life rarely pauses for ceremony.
Holiness keeps moving with us.


A silent drive can become holy ground.

No podcast filling the air.
No noise competing for attention.
Just hands on the wheel
and thoughts catching up to the heart.

Late light spills across the dashboard, turning dust into gold.
In that quiet, prayers rise without effort.
Grief loosens.
Gratitude settles gently.

A red light becomes an unexpected pause.

“Be still, and know.”

This is not idleness.
It is inhabiting your own life.
Letting the nervous system settle.
Making space for God
in moments when no one needs anything from you.

Silence is not emptiness.
It is uncluttered presence.


Caregiving is sacred labor.

Rarely dramatic.
Often repetitive.
Constantly interruptible.
Mostly unseen.

Showing up when energy is thin.
Listening when your mind strains to focus.
Holding steady as someone else unravels.

A dim lamp. A tired voice. Staying on the line.

Love expressed as endurance.
Grace expressed as staying.

The world measures impact by scale.
Heaven seems to measure it by faithfulness.

Meals prepared.
Appointments kept.
Quiet reassurances offered.
Unseen sacrifices made.

This is altar work.

Not in sanctuaries of stone,
but in living rooms and bedrooms,
in passenger seats and late-night phone calls.

“The Lord sees in secret.”

For many of us,
this is what devotion looks like now.


Holiness doesn’t always arrive with intensity.

More often, it comes quietly, as attention.

Staying with the next small thing.
Moving gently through familiar responsibilities.
Offering ordinary hours back to God
without needing them to feel extraordinary.

You are allowed to call this enough.

Some seasons, this is the only kind of faith we have left.

These moments form a quiet rhythm the soul already knows,
the prayer of folded towels,
the psalm of steady driving,
the sacrament of showing up again.

The Shepherd who walks at your pace
and leads beside still waters
remains just as present in fluorescent kitchens
and on quiet roads at dusk.

Goodness and mercy don’t wait for remarkable moments.
They follow you into the ordinary hours,
staying close in ways you almost miss,

Ordinary hours become holy
when love is what carries them.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Future Is Not Hunting You

 

Goodness and Mercy as the Companions Who Refuse to Leave

A devotional reflection on Psalm 23:6 and the promise of being pursued by love rather than fear.

“Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.”
— Psalm 23:6


Some seasons teach the body that safety can disappear without warning.

Loss arrives suddenly.
Relationships fracture quietly.
Ground once trusted gives way.

For those who have lived through sudden loss,
who have stepped away from what once defined them,
who are learning to stop chasing what no longer holds,
the nervous system remembers.

Scanning.
Rehearsing.
Bracing.

Soon the future starts to feel like something waiting to go wrong.

This is not weakness.
It is protection shaped by pain.

Even now, goodness is closer than your next worry.

Into that guarded posture, Psalm 23 speaks a startling promise.

Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life.

Not maybe.
Not when strength returns.
Not when faith performs well.

Surely.

This is what healing feels like when it no longer tries to prove itself.


You Are Not Being Chased by Harm

At first glance, the verse reads like gentle comfort.
A soft blessing at the close of a beloved psalm.

Yet the Hebrew carries stronger motion.

The verb translated follow means to pursue, to chase, to run after with persistence.
Active. Intentional. Relentless.
The same word used for enemies hunting their target.

David takes language shaped by threat
and turns it inside out.

Danger is not what chases you.
Love is.

Two companions move behind you,
closing distance, refusing to fall back.

Goodness and Mercy.

Not passive blessings drifting through experience,
but active presences ensuring that no matter how far you walk
or what you lose along the way,
care keeps catching up.

You are never unaccompanied.

Even when people fall away,
divine companionship remains.

You are not being hunted by loss.
You are being escorted by love.


Goodness: When Life Comes Back Into Order

Goodness means more than moral virtue.
It means fit for purpose.
Aligned with design.
Functioning as intended.

When God called creation good,
He was declaring order.
Everything in its rightful place.
Everything working as it should.

That same restoring order appears in human life.

After long seasons of disorder,
emotional imbalance,
one-sided relationships,
grief without ground,
spiritual geometry begins to reset.

Pieces settle.
Proportions return.

Chaos loosens.
Balance returns.

You see it in ordinary ways.

Finances stabilizing.
Children finding their footing.
Days carrying rhythm instead of frenzy.
Creative work flowing without old urgency.

Sometimes it looks like a day that asks nothing heroic of you.
Just steadiness. Just enough. Just presence.

This is goodness at work,
the quiet signature of divine order returning to the soul.

Once you scanned the horizon for what might break.
Now you notice what quietly holds.

Chasing is no longer required.
Alignment makes space for goodness to pursue you.

Love is not waiting ahead of you.
It is walking just behind.


Mercy: The Love That Moves at Healing Speed

If goodness restores order,
mercy restores people.

Mercy is loyal love.
Steadfast presence.
Relational faithfulness that does not withdraw.

Not sentimental softness.
Committed patience.

Where goodness sets things right,
mercy gives them time to catch up.

Mercy whispers,
Even this unfinished part of you is still mine.

Fear may still tremble.
Forgiveness may still be forming.
Grief may still breathe beneath the surface.

Mercy stays.

You are not late to healing.
Mercy moves at human speed.

Without mercy, goodness would feel like pressure.
Without goodness, mercy would drift without direction.

Together they form the two wings of divine love.
Structure and softness.
Truth and tenderness.
Restoration and refuge.


Why They Follow Instead of Lead

The Shepherd leads.
Goodness and mercy follow.

That order carries meaning.

Truth and obedience guide the road ahead.
Goodness and mercy tend the ground behind.

Footprints become holy ground.

Shame-marked places regain dignity.
Painful conversations lose their sting.

You do not need to curate your past into something acceptable.
Love is already walking through it.

Heaven’s quiet restoration continues,
repairing what was exposed,
redeeming what once felt irreversible.

Revisiting old ground is no longer required.
Repairing yesterday is not your burden.

Goodness and mercy are already there.
Rebalancing. Reconciling. Redeeming.

You don’t have to repair the past.
Mercy already passed through it.


How They Appear in Daily Life

Announcements are rare.
Atmosphere is their language.

Timing aligns and life feels quietly right. That is goodness.
Something could have hurt more than it did. That is mercy.

Peace fills an ordinary morning.
A memory surfaces without panic, only understanding.

Unexpected provision.
Sudden stillness.
Ease that wasn’t manufactured.

This is how love follows.
Not loudly. Faithfully.

When Shoulders Lower and the Future Feels Safer

A subtle shift happens beneath awareness.

Shoulders drop.
Jaw loosens.
Breathing slows on its own.

Scanning eases.
Vigilance softens.

Attention widens.

Light through leaves.
Warmth in conversation.
Strength you didn’t plan but somehow have.

Provision without spectacle.
Care without announcement.
Presence without performance.

Goodness keeps pace quietly.
Mercy stays close behind.


The Pursuit That Never Ends

Seasonal comfort is not the promise.
Lifelong accompaniment is.

All the days of your life.

No expiration.
No withdrawal.
No fine print.

Goodness keeps arranging what truth has planted.
Mercy keeps redeeming what human frailty leaves unfinished.

The pursuit continues
because love does.


The Emotional Texture of Being Followed by Love

Walking without flinching.
Living without rehearsing loss.

Ease replaces dread.
Steadiness replaces scanning.

You once ran after love.
Now love runs after you.

That inversion marks transformation.

Belonging is no longer negotiated.
It is lived.

What follows you now is not threat.
It is favor.

************

If this reflection resonated, you may also find comfort in:

Sung Over (on being carried when strength runs thin)
When Love Feels Unsafe (rediscovering spiritual safety after relational hurt)
Belonging Without Performance (living as held rather than earning love) 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Heaven and Hell Begin in the Heart

 

Jesus’ Vision of Love Expanding and Love Contracting

When Jesus spoke about heaven and hell, he did not begin by describing distant places.

He spoke about the direction of the human heart.

Some hearts grow wider.

Others slowly grow smaller.

One direction allows love to expand the soul. The other quietly pulls inward around fear, control, and self-protection.

For Jesus, heaven and hell begin long before the end of life.

They begin in the quiet choices that shape the heart.

And those choices often begin so subtly we barely notice them.

A guarded tone in conversation.

A hesitation before offering kindness again.

A small tightening in the chest when trust is asked of us once more.

Over time these small movements shape the interior world. Life can grow wider and more spacious. Or it can begin to feel careful and contained.

Jesus speaks about this movement not simply as a future judgment but as a trajectory already unfolding in the soul.

One of his most repeated sayings captures the paradox.

“Whoever seeks to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for my sake will find it.”

At first the statement sounds puzzling. Saving one’s life appears responsible. Protect what matters. Guard yourself from harm. Maintain control where possible so that life does not unravel.

Yet Jesus describes an unexpected reversal.

When the human heart organizes itself primarily around preservation, something essential begins to diminish. The energy of life slowly turns inward toward protection.

Defending every vulnerability.
Securing every advantage.
Protecting the self from exposure.

These strategies promise safety, yet they quietly reshape the interior world.

Relationships grow guarded.
Joy becomes conditional.
Love begins to feel negotiated rather than freely given.

Over time the soul learns to live carefully.

Life may still appear full from the outside. Responsibilities remain. Conversations continue. But inside, something has grown smaller.

But Jesus then names another path. When the self loosens its grip, when control softens and love is allowed to move more freely, something surprising happens.

Life expands.

Compassion grows wider. Mercy becomes more natural. The heart becomes capable of carrying sorrow without closing itself off from joy.

Love cannot expand where the heart feels constantly threatened. But when the soul begins to trust that it is safe to open, something larger than fear begins to take shape.

Jesus returns to this same movement when he speaks about forgiveness. Peter once asks him how many times forgiveness should be offered. Seven times already feels generous. Yet Jesus answers with language that stretches the imagination. Seventy times seven.

He is not offering a mathematical formula.

He is revealing something about the interior life.

When Mercy Finds a Place to Rest

Refusing forgiveness often feels justified. The injury was real. The loss mattered. Remembering protects us from being wounded again.

But resentment quietly reshapes the heart.

When resentment becomes the organizing center of the interior life, the past begins occupying more and more space. The mind returns repeatedly to what was done. Emotional energy remains tied to what cannot be changed.

The future slowly grows smaller because the heart remains tethered to the wound.

Mercy does something the guarded heart struggles to imagine.

It allows the soul to stop rehearsing its defenses.

Forgiveness does not erase the past. It does something quieter and far more freeing. It loosens the hold the injury has on the soul. Life is no longer forced to circle endlessly around the moment of harm.

Something inside opens again.

The future becomes wider.

Jesus often described the life of God through images that carry this same movement of expansion. The Kingdom of God, he says, is like a mustard seed. Something so small it could easily be overlooked. Yet when it grows it becomes a tree large enough for birds to rest in its branches.

It is like yeast slowly working its way through dough until the entire loaf rises.

It is like a field yielding a harvest far greater than the seed that was planted.

These are images of life widening.

Love spreading through what once seemed small and contained.

For Jesus, the Kingdom of God is not merely a future destination waiting somewhere beyond death. It is a reality already unfolding wherever the human heart opens itself to love.

But Jesus also describes another movement.

This direction rarely begins with dramatic collapse. It emerges gradually through small decisions repeated over time.

The decision to remain guarded rather than vulnerable.

The habit of suspicion where trust once lived.

The quiet belief that protecting the self will ultimately preserve life.

Bit by bit the heart becomes less responsive.

Not hardened overnight, but slowly less able to receive grace when it arrives. Mercy begins to feel uncomfortable. Compassion feels costly. Love can even begin to feel threatening rather than freeing.

The interior world grows smaller.

When the Heart Quietly Pulls Inward

Jesus illustrates this movement in several of his stories.

In one parable a servant who has been forgiven an enormous debt refuses to forgive a much smaller one. The heart that received mercy suddenly closes when asked to extend it.

In another encounter a wealthy man approaches Jesus with a sincere question about eternal life. When Jesus invites him to release what he cannot let go of, the man walks away grieving.

The invitation to life stands before him.

But the cost of opening his hands feels too great.

Again and again the pattern appears.

Where love is resisted, life grows smaller.

Where love is received, life expands.

Perhaps this is why Jesus so often spoke about heaven and hell as directions rather than destinations.

Heaven may begin much earlier than we imagine.

It begins whenever love is allowed to widen the heart.

One direction opens the heart toward humility, compassion, and mercy.

The other slowly closes the interior world until love feels distant even when it stands close by.

Jesus does not describe these paths simply to warn.

He describes them as an invitation.

A quiet turning of the heart.

Because wherever love is allowed to widen the soul, heaven has already begun.

******

For a reflection on how love can quietly become guarded in relationships, you might appreciate: When Love Feels Unsafe

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Sung Over

 

When God’s Joy Becomes Your Rest

A Zephaniah 3:17 Devotional for Those Who Are Tired of Being Strong and Bracing

There are seasons when you grow accustomed to being steady.

The one who absorbs.
The one who does not need much.
The one who quiets herself before anyone notices.

You learn how to contain disappointment.
How to soften longing before it shows.
How to remain composed when something inside you trembles.

Born of love.
Shaped by necessity.
Refined in fragile rooms.

It feels mature.

It feels responsible.

It keeps you safe.

It keeps disappointment at a distance.

But something in you stays braced.

Zephaniah speaks into that posture without correction.

“The Lord your God is in your midst.”

Not distant.
Not evaluating.
Present.

“He will rejoice over you with gladness.”

Rejoice.

Not merely forgive.
Not simply accept.

Rejoice.

“He will quiet you by His love.”

You have learned to quiet yourself.

Here, you are quieted.

Not by effort.
Not by explanation.

By love.

When the Body Stops Bracing for Disappointment

And something shifts beneath thought.

The shoulders lower a fraction.
The breath deepens without instruction.
The jaw softens.
The room feels less threatening.

You are not scanning for withdrawal.
Not preparing for love to thin.
Not bracing for silence.
Not adjusting yourself to stay wanted.

You do not have to anticipate the next thing.

“He will exult over you with loud singing.”

God sings.

Not because you achieved something.
Not because you remained strong.

Because you are His.

Singing does not hurry.
It does not evaluate.
It does not withdraw when the room grows quiet.

It lingers where there is pleasure.

This is not the first time God has looked at you with delight.

From the beginning,
before you learned to brace,
before you learned to earn,
He called His creation very good.

Singing is not a reward.
It is not earned.

If you have been strong longer than you wanted to be,
this may feel unfamiliar.

Not merely accepted.
Pleasure in your being.

You are rejoiced over with gladness and surrounded by song.

You do not have to hold yourself together here.

You are being sung over by a God who delights in you.

*****

This reflection continues The Theology of Being Held series
from Resting Without Reaching (Psalm 131)
to When Wanting Falls Quiet (Psalm 23)
to Known Without Earning (Psalm 139)

and now Rejoiced Over (Zephaniah 3:17).