“I don't think of all the misery, but of the beauty that still remains.”
DEUTERONOMY 14-16
JOURNAL
To truly live aware and present is much harder than it seems. As humans we naturally try to give context to everything. Our memories anchor us. They tell us where we have been, how we arrived here, and in many ways who we are. Without them, waking up each morning would feel like appearing in a story with no beginning.
The brain is a remarkable gift. It allows us to hold the past, while also imagining a future that does not yet exist. We can plan, build, create, and dream of things that have never been before. That alone is extraordinary. Yet another gift works alongside it: emotion. Those chemical reactions in our bodies give color and meaning to our memories and to our visions of the future. They help us care, love, hope, and sometimes even mourn what is broken.
When memory, imagination, and emotion are working well together, human beings can do extraordinary things. We build communities. We care for one another. We create beauty, order, and goodness. But when those systems drift out of alignment, we can also move quickly toward fear, selfishness, and chaos.
This is why the present moment matters so much. The real danger is not simply that things go wrong. The deeper danger is that we fail to see the sacred opportunity of today. Today is the only place where life is actually lived. It is the only place where the future is shaped. Everything that will ever become good, meaningful, or lasting begins in this moment.
When I slow down and truly notice what is around me, I begin to see the deeper design. The needs of people. The quiet joys. The blessings that often go unnoticed. Even the struggles that shape us. God has authored a world that is alive with possibility, and He continues to work through ordinary people in ordinary moments.
The laws in Deuteronomy about canceling debts reveal something profound about God's intention for humanity. At its best, the system He designed is not one that traps people in despair but one that restores them. It is a world where generosity interrupts cycles of poverty, where mercy resets what has become broken. The design is not meant to grind people down. It is meant to lift them up.
And Jesus reminds us to stay watchful and awake, not because we are meant to live in fear, but because the moment in front of us matters. Each person has an assigned task. Each life carries responsibility and opportunity.
When that awareness takes root, something beautiful begins to emerge. Humanity becomes capable of incredible goodness. A widow giving two small coins becomes more powerful than wealthy men giving out of abundance. The act itself is small, but the heart behind it transforms the world.
When the system works as God intended, it produces generosity, restoration, joy, and beauty. It produces the things that make life worth living.
Anne Frank, in the midst of unimaginable darkness, wrote that she chose not to think of all the misery but of the beauty that still remains. That perspective is not naïve. It is deeply perceptive. Beneath the brokenness of the world is a design that still points toward goodness.
And every day we are invited to participate in it.
When we live awake to the present, aware of others, and responsive to what God is doing, we become part of building something remarkable. A world where mercy interrupts hardship. A world where generosity reshapes systems. A world where simple acts of faith and love multiply into something far greater than we can see.
In the end, we are not just surviving life.
We are helping create something beautiful.
To truly live aware and present is much harder than it seems. As humans we naturally try to give context to everything. Our memories anchor us. They tell us where we have been, how we arrived here, and in many ways who we are. Without them, waking up each morning would feel like appearing in a story with no beginning.
The brain is a remarkable gift. It allows us to hold the past, while also imagining a future that does not yet exist. We can plan, build, create, and dream of things that have never been before. That alone is extraordinary. Yet another gift works alongside it: emotion. Those chemical reactions in our bodies give color and meaning to our memories and to our visions of the future. They help us care, love, hope, and sometimes even mourn what is broken.
When memory, imagination, and emotion are working well together, human beings can do extraordinary things. We build communities. We care for one another. We create beauty, order, and goodness. But when those systems drift out of alignment, we can also move quickly toward fear, selfishness, and chaos.
This is why the present moment matters so much. The real danger is not simply that things go wrong. The deeper danger is that we fail to see the sacred opportunity of today. Today is the only place where life is actually lived. It is the only place where the future is shaped. Everything that will ever become good, meaningful, or lasting begins in this moment.
When I slow down and truly notice what is around me, I begin to see the deeper design. The needs of people. The quiet joys. The blessings that often go unnoticed. Even the struggles that shape us. God has authored a world that is alive with possibility, and He continues to work through ordinary people in ordinary moments.
The laws in Deuteronomy about canceling debts reveal something profound about God's intention for humanity. At its best, the system He designed is not one that traps people in despair but one that restores them. It is a world where generosity interrupts cycles of poverty, where mercy resets what has become broken. The design is not meant to grind people down. It is meant to lift them up.
And Jesus reminds us to stay watchful and awake, not because we are meant to live in fear, but because the moment in front of us matters. Each person has an assigned task. Each life carries responsibility and opportunity.
When that awareness takes root, something beautiful begins to emerge. Humanity becomes capable of incredible goodness. A widow giving two small coins becomes more powerful than wealthy men giving out of abundance. The act itself is small, but the heart behind it transforms the world.
When the system works as God intended, it produces generosity, restoration, joy, and beauty. It produces the things that make life worth living.
Anne Frank, in the midst of unimaginable darkness, wrote that she chose not to think of all the misery but of the beauty that still remains. That perspective is not naïve. It is deeply perceptive. Beneath the brokenness of the world is a design that still points toward goodness.
And every day we are invited to participate in it.
When we live awake to the present, aware of others, and responsive to what God is doing, we become part of building something remarkable. A world where mercy interrupts hardship. A world where generosity reshapes systems. A world where simple acts of faith and love multiply into something far greater than we can see.
In the end, we are not just surviving life.
We are helping create something beautiful.
41As Jesus was sitting opposite the treasury, He watched the crowd putting money into it. And many rich people put in large amounts. 42Then one poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which amounted to a small fraction of a denarius.l
43Jesus called His disciples to Him and said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more than all the others into the treasury. 44For they all contributed out of their surplus, but she out of her poverty has put in all she had to live on.”
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