Pastor Sam's Weekly Devotionals
Trust and Rest
Verse for Meditation:
“Do you still have no faith?” – Mark 4:4
As we live in light of the empty Tomb, how are we responding to what Christ has done for us? Here is a second devotion that focuses on our character of faith:
IN WORD – The life of faith requires us to lean on an invisible source of strength and wisdom. We do not have an unfounded faith, but we learn quickly that it does not rest on our five senses. And as we trust God, we find that very real and visible storms war against our belief in the invisible God. Sooner or later, a greater test will come and we will have to choose: Trust God or trust ourselves. We cannot do both.
At some point in this walk of faith, we must learn to detach from the things that so greatly concern us and cast them wholly on God. This feels irresponsible at first, but it is actually irresponsible not to do so. We must stop thinking of ourselves as the source of deliverance in a difficult situation. It is not up to us to save. We may be useful tools of God, but not everything is riding on us. Usually, we approach crises as though God is depending on us to do the work while He supports us in the background. We need to turn that around. We must depend on God to do the work while we are behind the scenes believing in Him. When He says to act, we must act. But most of us act far too quickly and believe much too slowly. We must be quick to believe and hesitant to interfere in God’s work. By this we can keep our hearts from being so troubled, if we will really trust in Him.
IN DEED – How do you react in a crisis? Do you feel responsible to step in and intervene? Perhaps God will require you to do so, but rarely until you have first trusted Him with a calm heart, sought His will diligently, made yourself fully available, and waited for His timing.
When we pray and ask for God’s will to be done in a given situation, we must believe that His will is, in fact, very good, and that He is quite able to accomplish it. Any asking that maintains an internal sense of panic is not genuine trust. It reveals a hidden belief that we are perhaps more critical to the situation than God is. But to trust is to rest, and the heart that is calm has learned that Jesus is above the storm. “Nothing influences the quality of our life more than how we respond to trouble.” —Erwin Tieman (in “At Jesus’ Feet” by Chris Tiegreen)
Are you able to rest in Jesus? As He has died for you and given you the hope of the resurrection, can you trust that His goodness can overcome any trial that you face?
If you need to grow in faith, take time to read Daniel 1-4 and 6 this week. Meditate on the faith of Daniel and his three friends and ask the Holy Spirit to help you experience God’s powerful presence as you rest and trust in Him. Have a blessed week! – from Singapore, Pastor Sam