Tag: Faith over fear

  • God’s Show

    God’s Show

    Scripture reading: John 6:1-14

    Today’s scene opens with a large crowd, a real need, and no obvious solution.

    Thousands have gathered around Jesus Christ, following Him and listening to His teaching. But now, they are hungry. What began as a moment of ministry has become a logistical problem.

    Then Jesus does something unexpected. He turns to His disciples and asks for a solution, not because He doesn’t know what to do, but because He is about to reveal something deeper.

    As usual, logic speaks first. Philip calculates: “It would take more than half a year’s wages to buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!” (John 6:7). It’s a reasonable response – thoughtful, practical, and sensible. But it is also limited. Philip sees the problem through the lens of human capacity and arrives at a natural conclusion: This is impossible.

    Andrew speaks next. He sees something, but his vision is short-sighted: “There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish, but what are they for so many?” (John 6:9). His faith is present, but it doesn’t stretch far enough. There is a resource, yet it feels insignificant. Almost not worth mentioning. A boy. A lunch. Five loaves. Two fish. In any serious plan, it doesn’t count. But they forget: this is God’s show!

    In God’s economy, the pattern is different. The problem is allowed to be too big. The resource is allowed to be too small, so that the outcome will be undeniably divine.

    Jesus takes the loaves, gives thanks, breaks them, and has His disciples distribute them. And suddenly, what was insufficient becomes abundant. What was overlooked becomes central.
    What seemed foolish becomes the answer.

    Everyone eats until they’re satisfied, and there are still leftovers.

    This moment is not just about provision; it is a revelation. God is not limited by the size of your resources, the scale of your problem, or the logic of your calculations. He is looking for something else: Are you available? Are you willing to surrender what you have to Him? Will you trust Him a little more?

    The boy didn’t have much, but he had something. And in the hands of Jesus, that was enough.

    Reflection

    1. What situation in your life currently feels “too big” for you to handle?
    2. What do you have in your hands right now that you may be dismissing as “not enough”?
    3. What would it look like to place that small thing fully in God’s hands?

    Prayer

    Heavenly Father, thank You that You are not limited by what limits me. Where I see lack, You see possibility. Where I see insufficiency, You see an opportunity for Your power to be revealed.

    Lord, I bring before You the areas of my life that feel overwhelming—the needs I cannot meet, the problems I cannot solve, and the questions I cannot answer.

    Teach me to trust You. Help me not to despise what I have, even if it seems small. Give me the faith to place it in Your hands, believing that You are able to do more than I can imagine.

    Let my life be a testimony that when You are at work, “not enough” becomes more than enough.

    In Jesus’ name, Amen.

    Thank you for joining us for today’s encouragement. If this message blessed you, kindly share it with someone who may also be encouraged by it.

    Until next time, stay blessed.

  • The storm is over!

    The storm is over!

    Scripture reading: Mark 4:35–41

    My first real experience of ‘turbulence’ was probably when I encountered an eclamptic patient for the first time. She was a young woman, about seven months into her first pregnancy, who had been wheeled into the emergency room a few minutes after having a fit and losing consciousness. She went on to have a series of violent seizures — several bouts of vehement, untamable tremors involving her entire body — that had to be aborted with waves and waves of intravenous anticonvulsants. It was like a storm.

    In Mark 4:35-41, we witness yet another storm. On the evening of a day when Jesus had been teaching His disciples powerful truths about the Kingdom, He decided to put them through a practical session on faith. He said to them, “Let us cross over to the other side,” and the disciples obliged, unaware of what lay ahead. Among them were seasoned fishermen who were no strangers to the Sea of Galilee and its occasional turbulence.

    On their way across, “a huge storm came up. Waves poured into the boat, threatening to sink it” (Mark 4:37, MSG). Storms come to prepare us for ‘the other side’. God allows certain storms to shape and strengthen us for what’s next. In life, we will encounter many challenges. These challenges are meant to stretch us — to test and strengthen our capacity to overcome — and in the process, make us better. Without fire, there’s no refining. Faith must be tested, and our resolve must not waver when boisterous waves pour into our boat, threatening to sink it, because Jesus is in the stern.

    “Jesus was in the stern, head on a pillow, sleeping! They roused him, saying, ‘Teacher, is it nothing to you that we’re going down?” (Mark 4:38, MSG). They were afraid. But three things should have put them at ease:

    1. Jesus had assured them they were going to the other side (verse 35).
    2. He was with them (verse 36).
    3. He was peacefully asleep as though there was no imminent danger (verse 38) — because, as we’ll soon see, there wasn’t.

    Instead, they fixed their eyes on the waves. Faith perishes where fear thrives. And fear thrives when we focus on our turbulent circumstances instead of fastening our faith to the Rock that cannot move — Jesus. They failed the test (verse 40).

    Jesus steps in. “…He told the wind to pipe down and said to the sea, ‘Quiet! Settle down!’ The wind ran out of breath; the sea became smooth as glass.”Mark 4:39, MSG

    One of the tenets of managing obstetric emergencies like eclampsia is to call for help. At times, experience alone is not enough. Occasionally, our faith may falter. But when we call on Jesus, He will intervene. When He speaks, the billowing waves settle like glass, and not a whisper is heard from the wind. When He speaks, the storm is over!

    Let’s Pray

    Lord, quieten these storms —
    Waves of doubt threatening to flood my heart.
    Let me know You are with me.

    Lord, calm the turbulence —
    Winds of fear threatening to shake my soul.
    Let me know You are with me.

    As the boisterous sea rages around me,
    May Your unfailing Word anchor me.
    In the midst of the storm — “Peace, be still!”

    Reflections

    1. What are some examples of storms that tend to test your faith in God? What are you most afraid of?
    2. To deal with fear, you need faith. Faith comes by imbibing God’s Word.
    3. How can you keep yourself grounded in God’s Word?
    4. The essence of tests is growth. Beyond having a personal relationship with Him, God is invested in your journey — in you crossing to the other side.
    5. You are not alone, even when it feels like it. God is near.
    6. Call on Him in times of trouble — and He will answer (Psalm 50:15).