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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Invincible

Lying awake in bed, Beth stared into the darkness, trying to keep her thoughts from wandering to places she did not want them to go.

“How long, O God?” she whispered.

The question had become her nightly companion.

How much longer would this agony last?

Each day brought a new uncertainty. She found herself wondering which day would be her last. The future she had once taken for granted suddenly seemed fragile. There had been plans she thought she had decades to complete, dreams she believed could wait for another season.

Now it felt as though time itself was urging her to hurry.

Fear gnawed at her from one side, while faith pulled her forward from the other.

Some days the fear seemed stronger.

But that night, as she lay awake, she reached for her Bible and read words she had known for years:

“Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will never pass away.”
Matthew 24:35

She held on to that promise as a drowning sailor clings to a rope in a storm.

If everything else could fail, God's Word would not.

With that thought she finally closed her eyes and slept.

The next morning sunlight streamed through the curtains and filled the room with warmth.

For a brief moment she felt almost normal.

Then her eyes caught sight of the mirror.

She quickly looked away.

The face staring back no longer felt familiar.

The illness had taken more than her strength.

It had stolen pieces of the woman she once knew.

A thought had been growing in her heart for weeks.

Perhaps she needed to leave the walls that constantly reminded her of sickness.

Perhaps she needed to be closer to life itself.

That afternoon she asked a friend if she could stay with her . Her friend lived in the countryside, surrounded by trees, open fields, and fresh air.

When she told her husband of her plans, he looked at her with concern.

“You are not well,” he said. “Where are you going?”

“To stay with my friend for a while.”

“Why?”

She smiled.

“To live close to sunlight and fresh air.”

“What if you get worse?”

The question hung in the air.

She looked at him and answered softly.

“What if I get better?”

A few days later she arrived at her friend's home.

The countryside welcomed her with quiet mornings, singing birds, and fields that stretched beyond the horizon.

For the first time in months, her soul felt at rest.

One morning, while sharing breakfast, she asked her friend a question from the Holy Book.

“What did Daniel and his friends eat?”

Her friend laughed.

“Vegetables and water.”

She nodded thoughtfully.

Then another question came.

“What did the Israelites eat in the Promised Land?”

Together they opened the Scriptures and read of wheat and barley, vines and fig trees, pomegranates, olive trees, and honey.

“For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land... a land of wheat and barley, vines and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive oil and honey.”
Deuteronomy 8:7–8

Foods God Himself had described as abundant and good.

She closed the Bible and smiled.

“Then let's eat those foods and see what happens.”

Over the next few days, she began filling her table with the foods she found in Scripture fresh vegetables, grains, lentils, figs, pomegranates, olives, honey, and simple homemade bread.

Each meal felt less like a diet and more like an act of faith.

With every bite, she was reminded that the God who had created the body also knew how to nourish it.

And so they did.

The days became weeks and the weeks became months.

She spent her mornings in the sunlight and her afternoons helping wherever she could.

At first it was small tasks.

Then longer walks.

Then work in the garden.

The strength that had once seemed lost slowly began to return.

Colour returned to her cheeks.

Life returned to her eyes.

Three months later her family came to visit.

As they approached the property, they looked around for her.

Then they spotted someone working in the field.

Bent over the soil, digging potatoes from the earth.

For a moment they did not recognize her.

The woman standing before them looked stronger than she had since the illness began.

Her cheeks were rosy.

Her arms were firm from work.

Her smile was radiant.

“Mom!” one of them shouted.

She turned around.

“You look amazing!”

She laughed, brushing the dirt from her hands.

“Yes,” she said, her eyes shining.

The journey was not over.

There were still challenges ahead.

But something had changed.

Fear no longer had the final word.

Faith did.

The illness had taken her strength, her confidence, and almost her hope.

But it had not taken her faith.

For the woman who once lay awake in fear had discovered something stronger than fear itself.

Not that she was invincible.

But that the God who held her was.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

The Long Road Home

The young prince sat in the darkness of the prison,
speaking to an old man beside him.

“What do you mean let it go?”
He said in anger.
“How can I ever let it go?

Look what they have done to us.
The neighbouring kings
My father’s own friends
Did not come to our aid.
Instead, they aligned themselves with the enemy
and brought our kingdom to ruin.

And now you say
Let God deal with it?

Do you know how many years it took
for my father to prepare me to rule.

Years he laboured,
teaching and shaping me to lead.

And just when I was ready
to take my rightful place
as the heir to the throne

Everything was destroyed.

Everything wiped away.
Nothing remained.

And still you tell me
to let it go.”

The old man answered quietly,

“Many times the people
who deceive us the most
are those closest to us.

But God is always faithful.

Look at Joseph.
He was sold by his own brothers,
yet God reversed the evil done to him.

From slavery he rose to power
and became the prime minister of Egypt.”

The young man replied bitterly,

“So what are you saying?
That I to will rule another's kingdom?”

The old man shook his head.

“No.

You must find your way
back to your own kingdom.

And remember this
you are not the only prisoner here.

There are others like you.

When the opportunity comes
we must act.”

And so they waited.

One night, when the guards were few
and the watch was careless,

They broke free.

They climbed the prison walls
and ran for miles and miles
until their strength was nearly gone.

At last they entered a thick forest
where the paths were hidden
and the trees swallowed the light.

There they wandered for months,
lost among the shadows,
searching for a way forward.

But in time
they found the road.

The long road
that led them home.

Yet when they reached their kingdom
their hearts were broken.

The land was desolate.

No trees.
No animals.
No buildings.

No people.

Everything was dead.

They stood there in silence
and then they wept.

“What do we do now?”
Someone asked.

Then the old man spoke.

“Let us go to the neighbouring lands.
Let us tell them about this place
about how rich this land once was,
how the city once prospered.

Let us invite them to come
and build again.”

So they went from land to land
telling the story of the kingdom.

And the people came.

Builders came.
Farmers came.
Families came.

And slowly the city rose again.

Soon it became even greater
than it had been before.

And the young man
was made the ruler over that land.

And the old prisoner
became his adviser.

To this day
he remains faithful
to his calling
and to his purpose.

And he became
a good king.

Beloved,

Your purpose still remains
no matter what happens in life.

God will lead you
to the place for which
He created you.

Even if the road is long.
Even if the journey seems endless.

God will bring you

Home.

Genesis 50:20 CJB

20 You meant to do me harm, but God meant it for good so that it would come about as it is today, with many people’s lives being saved.


Jeremiah 1:5 CJB
5 “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you;
before you were born, I separated you for myself.
I have appointed you to be a prophet to the nations.”


Saturday, January 17, 2026

You Raised Me Up

I had resigned myself
to the life of a shepherd.

Everyone else was in the king’s army,
fighting wars
and here I was,
left behind with the sheep.

“Why can’t I go and fight?”
I asked my father,
again and again.

“Your job is to take care of the sheep, son,”
he would answer.
“Someone has to do that.”

And so my fate seemed decided.

I did all I could
to protect what was given to me
lions and bears I fought and killed with my bare hands.

The rest of the time,
I wrote poetry.
I sang to Adonai with my lyre.

Resigned to my fate.
Resigned to my life.

Just when I thought
nothing better could come of it,
my father called me.

Samuel the prophet
wanted to anoint me.

Me.
A nobody.
Just a shepherd boy.

He anointed me
to be the next King of Israel.

How was that even possible?

I barely knew how to read.
I didn’t know how to lift a sword.

Yet the anointing was not a lie
it was truth.

God had a plan far greater than me.
I understood that much.

But was I ready
to let Him mould me
into what I needed to become?
Those questions
haunted me.

Then, out of the blue,
I was called to the palace
to play and sing for the king.

For the first time,
I saw what nobility looked like.

Later, while running an errand for my father,
I saw my brothers on the battlefield.

And I don’t know what came over me
as I watched a brute
mocking the God of Israel
and His people.

And before I knew it
I had slain the giant who mocked my God.

From that moment,
everything changed.

I was trained to be a warrior.
I was made commander of the king’s armies.
I was praised more than the king himself.
His daughter was given to me in marriage.

And then
I was hunted like a deer.

The king chased me,
driven by envy.

I cried out to God,
“Why did you choose me?
I never asked for any of this.”

And He answered
by giving me outlaws
men with nothing to lose.

Their numbers grew.
They became an army.
The finest men I could have hoped for.

Adonai made us unconquerable.

And at the appointed time,
I was crowned King of Israel,
to reign until my dying day.

God raised me up
from shepherd boy
to king.

If He had such a great plan for me,
won’t He have one for you too?

If He transformed me into what I was meant to be,
according to His purpose, won’t He do the same for you?

    Psalms 30:1 (CJB)

2 (1) I will exalt you, Adonai, because you drew me up;
you didn’t let my enemies rejoice over me.

 

Jeremaih 29:11 (CJB)

11 For I know what plans I have in mind for you,’ says Adonai,‘plans for well-being, not for bad things; so that you can have hope and a future.