“Lack of confidence, sometimes alternating with unrealistic dreams of heroic success, often leads to procrastination, and many studies suggest that procrastinators are self-handicappers: rather than risk failure, they prefer to create conditions that make success impossible, a reflex that of course creates a vicious cycle.”
ACTS 8:26-40
JOURNAL
One of the greatest temptations I face is waiting for the dramatic while overlooking the miraculous. I find myself wanting the breakthrough, the mountaintop experience, the defining moment that changes everything. Yet I wonder if God spends far more time working through the ordinary than the extraordinary.
Social media and our culture don't help. We are constantly shown the biggest victories, the biggest failures, the most exciting stories, and the brightest shiny objects. It can make everyday faithfulness feel insignificant. Yet the truth is that the overwhelming majority of life is lived in the ordinary. Most of our days are not marked by dramatic successes or devastating failures. They are filled with conversations, small decisions, quiet acts of obedience, opportunities to encourage someone, moments of gratitude, and chances to love well.
Philip's story reminds me of this. An angel simply tells him to go down a desert road. There is no explanation, no grand announcement, just one small act of obedience. Philip goes, notices a man reading Isaiah, asks a simple question, and God changes a life. The miracle did not begin with the Ethiopian official. It began with Philip taking one ordinary step of obedience.
Job reminds me of something different but equally important. Life is fragile. We are here for only a little while, and trouble is simply part of living in a broken world. We cannot build our faith around circumstances because they are constantly changing. Some days bring joy. Others bring suffering. Neither defines God's presence.
Perhaps the greatest miracle is not found in extraordinary events but in God's quiet work through ordinary people who simply remain faithful. A parent loving their family. A teacher encouraging a student. A coach building character. A friend making a phone call. A neighbor showing kindness. These moments rarely make headlines, yet they may be the very places where God's kingdom advances.
I think I sometimes postpone living while waiting for something bigger. I dream about heroic accomplishments instead of embracing today's assignment. But Jesus never told us to pray for tomorrow's miracles. He told us to pray, "Give us today our daily bread." God's will is lived one day at a time, one act of obedience at a time, one conversation at a time.