Tuesday, June 9, 2026

God's Presence: Everywhere, Yet Often Unseen

A.W. Tozer drew a clear line between the universal presence of God and pantheism. He emphasized that nature is not God, and God is not merely the sum of all created things. While God dwells within His creation and is present in all His works, He remains infinitely transcendent above them. He is both immanent and sovereignly above all.

God is here. Right now, in this very place. There is no corner of the universe where He is absent. No one is farther from God or closer to Him than anyone else. His presence fills all things.When Adam sinned, he attempted the impossible: he tried to hide from God. David, too, wrestled with the same thought before realizing its futility. He wrote these unforgettable words in Psalm 139:
“Where shall I go from your Spirit? Or where shall I flee from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there! If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there! If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me.”

If God is present everywhere and we cannot escape Him, why does His presence often go unrecognized?The patriarch Jacob answered this after his dramatic encounter with God at Bethel. Awakening from his vision, he exclaimed in awe, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it!” That has been humanity’s problem ever since. We live in God’s world, yet we are often blind to the One who is nearer than our next breath.

There is a vital difference between God’s omnipresence and His manifest presence. 
God is always with us, even when we are completely unaware of Him. But His manifest presence is something more — it is when He makes Himself known to our hearts. It is the tangible, recognizable nearness of God that we can sense, experience, and respond to.Israel witnessed this in dramatic fashion: a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. The Ark of the Covenant stood as the visible symbol and dwelling place of God’s glory in their midst.

When Moses cried out, “Show me Your glory!” (Exodus 33:18), he was asking for more than a display of power — he longed for a deeper revelation of who God is. God answered that prayer, not with thunder or earthquake, but with a gracious revelation of His goodness. He hid Moses in the cleft of the rock and allowed him to see His glory in a way that would transform him.We need the same thing today. The more we experience God’s manifest presence, the more we will love Him, trust Him, worship Him, obey Him, and be filled with His Spirit. As we behold Him, we are changed.The Apostle Paul captured this beautifully: And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.” (2 Corinthians 3:18)

This transformation doesn’t happen automatically. It requires yielding — a wholehearted surrender to the Holy Spirit. His delight is to reveal the Father and the Son to us. When we cooperate with Him in loving obedience, God delights to manifest Himself.And that manifestation makes all the difference: it separates a nominal, cultural Christianity from a life radiant with the light of God’s face. May we, like Moses and Jacob, move beyond knowing about God’s presence to truly experiencing it — and be forever changed by the sight of His glory.

A Personal Challenge to You:

If you have read this and felt a stirring in your heart, don’t let this moment pass. God is not distant. He is here—right now, where you are. But He longs for something far greater than mere awareness of His presence. He wants you to know Him personally and experience His manifest presence in your life.Jesus Christ is the ultimate revelation of God’s presence among us. He is “Emmanuel”—God with us. 

Through His death on the cross and His resurrection, He removed every barrier so that you can come boldly into the Father’s presence and be filled with the Holy Spirit.Here is my challenge to you today:Acknowledge that you, like Adam and Jacob, have often been blind to God’s presence or tried to live without Him.

Turn to Jesus in simple, honest faith. Confess your need for Him, ask for forgiveness, and invite Him to be Lord of your life.

Ask boldly for His manifest presence, just as Moses did: “Lord Jesus, show me Your glory. Reveal Yourself to me. Fill me with Your Holy Spirit.”

If you are ready, pray this with me right now:
 
Lord Jesus, I believe You are the Son of God. I admit that I have lived apart from You and been blind to Your presence. Forgive my sins. Come into my life. I yield myself to You. Holy Spirit, make God’s presence real and tangible to me. Transform me from the inside out. I want to know You and walk with You every day. Amen.

If you just prayed that prayer, God has heard you. He is faithful. Begin reading the Bible (start with the Gospel of John), talk to Him daily, and find other believers who also hunger for God’s presence.
The same glory that changed Moses and the apostles is available to you today. Don’t settle for a distant, religious life. Step into the radiant, transforming presence of God through faith in Jesus Christ.
He is near. Will you respond?
Please share your decision in the comment box below. I look forward to hearing from you. 

















Mothered by God: The Comfort We All Desperately Need"

 In a world that feels more chaotic and heavy every single day, have you ever just wanted to be held? To be comforted like a child who’s had the worst day imaginable?God gives us an incredibly tender picture of exactly that in Isaiah 66. Listen to what He says:“I will extend peace to her like a river, and the wealth of the nations like a flooding stream. You will nurse and be carried on her arm and dandled on her knees. As a mother comforts her child, so will I comfort you; and you will be comforted over Jerusalem.” (Isaiah 66:12-13)

What a beautiful, almost shocking image. The God of the universe compares Himself to a loving, attentive mother. He doesn’t just promise to fix things from a distance. He says, “I will carry you. I will hold you. I will comfort you the way a mother comforts her precious child.”Think about that for a moment. A good mother doesn’t scold her crying baby for being emotional. She picks him up, draws him close to her chest, speaks softly, and lets him feel her heartbeat until the tears stop. That’s the kind of comfort God is offering you right now.We live in a troubling world. Anxiety is high. Hearts are weary. Many of us are walking around carrying burdens we were never meant to carry alone. And in the middle of all of it, the Lord leans in and says:“As a mother comforts her child, so I will comfort you.”This is not weak comfort. This is powerful, healing, mothering comfort from the One who knows you better than you know yourself. He offers peace that flows like a river — steady, deep, and life-giving. He offers provision that comes like a flooding stream — abundant and overflowing.And here’s the beautiful part: once you’ve been comforted by Him, you become a carrier of that same comfort to others.Listener, wherever you are today — whether you’re overwhelmed, grieving, anxious, or simply tired — lean into this promise. Let God mother you. Let Him pick you up, hold you close, and speak peace over your soul.You don’t have to tough it out. You don’t have to pretend you’re okay. Come to Him like a child and receive the comfort only He can give.As a mother comforts her child… so the Lord will comfort you.And that, my friend, changes everything.

Listener, wherever you are today — whether you’re overwhelmed, grieving, anxious, or simply tired — lean into this promise. Let God mother you. Let Him pick you up, hold you close, and speak peace over your soul.You don’t have to tough it out. You don’t have to pretend you’re okay. Come to Him like a child and receive the comfort only He can give.As a mother comforts her child… so the Lord will comfort you.And that, my friend, changes everything.

Please share your story in the comment section below. 




The Unstoppable Joy of Jesus

 They threw the apostles in jail—and the prisoners rejoiced in the Lord.

That single fact should stop us in our tracks. Not just survive prison, but rejoice in it. Not grumble, not despair, but overflow with joy in the darkest possible circumstances.Jesus had already prepared His followers for this kind of supernatural joy. On the night before His crucifixion, He told them:
“These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.” (John 15:11)
Notice the beautiful double promise. Jesus doesn’t merely offer us joy—He offers His joy. It is His joy flowing into us. And He doesn’t promise a trickle or a temporary high. He promises that our joy can be full.From Resurrection Joy to FullnessThe disciples tasted real joy when they saw the risen Christ. The Gospels tell us they were filled with “great joy.” But that wasn’t the end of the story.It was at Pentecost—when the Holy Spirit was poured out—that they experienced the fullness Jesus had promised. Suddenly, these fearful men became bold, radiant witnesses. Many believers throughout history testify to the same thing: when they were filled with the Holy Spirit, an intense, overflowing joy flooded their hearts.This is the joy of the Lord—deep, resilient, and independent of circumstances.A Wellspring That Never Runs DryUnlike happiness, which depends on what’s happening around us, this joy becomes a wellspring on the inside. It bubbles up even when life is hard. It overflows in both the highs and the lows of the faith journey.This joy is:
  • Christ’s own joy living in you
  • Everlasting — it has no expiration date
  • Untouchable — “No one will take your joy from you” (John 16:22)
People can take your freedom, your comfort, your reputation, and even your possessions, but they cannot take this joy because it doesn’t come from the world. It comes from Jesus Himself.
Today, the same promise stands for you.If you are in Christ, His joy is already available to you. Ask Him to fill you afresh with the Holy Spirit. Open your heart and let the joy of Jesus—not manufactured positivity, but His very own joy—settle deep inside you.This is the kind of joy that sings at midnight in prison.
This is the kind of joy that endures.
This is the kind of joy the world cannot give and cannot take away.
Let it be full in you.

Compelled by Love: When Your Labor Feels in Vain

 There are seasons when even the strongest believers feel like they’re standing on the edge of collapse. You pour out everything—your time, your prayers, your strength—and it seems to vanish into emptiness. The fruit you longed for never appears. 

The breakthrough you expected never comes. And in the quiet moments, the whisper rises: “All my labor has been in vain.”If you’ve ever felt that way, you’re in good company. Job sat in the ashes and cursed the day he was born. Elijah, fresh from the fire that fell from heaven, ran into the wilderness and begged God to take his life. These were not minor figures; they were giants of faith. Their honest cries remind us that deep discouragement does not automatically equal unbelief. 

It is often the language of weary saints who have simply run out of strength to pretend.Feelings come and feelings go. They are real, but they are not reliable. They rise like tides and recede just as quickly. What remains—what truly counts—is something far more solid:“The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” (Galatians 5:6)

This is the anchor. Not how you feel today, but whether your faith is still working itself out in love—for God and for people. When emotions scream “Quit,” love whispers “Stay.” When results are invisible, love still shows up. When the work feels pointless, love keeps serving.And what fuels this kind of persevering love? One reality above all others:“Christ’s love compels us, because we are convinced that one died for all, and therefore all died.” (2 Corinthians 5:14)

The word “compels” is powerful. It means to be hemmed in, controlled, overmastered. Paul wasn’t driven primarily by duty, guilt, or even vision. He was driven by love—the love of Christ displayed on the cross. When Paul looked at the cross, he saw more than a payment for sin. He saw a love so fierce and so complete that it demanded his entire life in response.Jesus died for all, so that all might die to self and live for Him. 

That truth seized Paul and turned a former persecutor into the most tireless missionary the world has ever seen. It pushed him through beatings, shipwrecks, imprisonments, and exhaustion. It kept him going when fruit seemed scarce and opposition was fierce. 

The love of Christ was not a gentle suggestion—it was a holy compulsion.Beloved, the same love that compelled Paul is available to compel you today.When your feelings tell you to quit, remember the cross. 

When the work feels vain, remember the Savior who poured out His life for you. When you sympathize with Job and Elijah, let their stories point you back to the same God who restored them both. He is still the One who “gives life to the dead and calls into existence things that do not exist” (Romans 4:17).So stay the course.

Keep loving.

Keep serving.

Keep believing.Not because you always feel like it, but because the love of Christ has laid hold of you—and that love never fails.His love is still the reason. And it is still enough.



Divine Perspective

Have you ever looked at your life, your ministry, or your daily hustle and thought, “What am I even doing? Is any of this actually making a difference?” 

If you are wrestling with a deep, quiet sense of failure today, you are in surprisingly elite company. Some of the most influential faith leaders in human history died believing they had accomplished absolutely nothing. 

When we pull back the curtain on their private journals, we find a shocking amount of despondency, doubt, and perceived defeat. But their stories reveal a beautiful, disruptive truth for our achievement-obsessed culture: No one is a failure when their faith is actively expressed through love. 

The Secret Heartbreak of Giants We look back at history through a polished lens, but the view from the ground was often messy and heartbreaking. Consider what these giants of the faith wrote when they thought no one was looking: ● John Calvin, one of the monumental fathers of the Reformation whose theology shaped Western civilization, looked back on his life’s work from his deathbed and whispered a devastating final assessment: "All that I have done is of no value." 

 Saint Bernard, a brilliant theologian who moved empires with his words, succumbed to a terrible despondency in his final days. He wrote: "I have failed in my purpose… my words and my writings have been a failure." 

David Livingstone, the legendary missionary who literally mapped the African continent for the Gospel and single-handedly sparked a global missions movement, fell into the same dark valley. In his 23rd year on the field, he wrote: "All that I have done has only opened up Africa to the slave trade… All work seems to be in vain. I have laboured for nothing."

 If men who altered the course of human history felt like absolute failures, why do we expect our own journeys to feel like an endless string of victories? 

Perhaps no story illustrates this radical upside-down reality better than a man named George Bowen. In the mid-1800s, Bowen walked away from immense wealth and fame in the West to become a missionary in Bombay, India. 

He gave up his official mission support to live among the poorest of the poor. He dressed like the locals, embraced extreme poverty, lived in a humble shack, and sometimes survived on nothing but bread and water. For over 40 years, 

Bowen preached on the streets in suffocating heat, distributed literature, and wept over the people he came to serve. He poured his heart, mind, body, and spirit into India. The result? In over four decades of ministry, George Bowen did not record a single convert. Crushed by the silence, he wrote in his journal: "I am the most useless being in the church. God bruises and crushes me with disappointments… My labour has all been in vain." But history tells a completely different story. 

After Bowen passed away, mission societies discovered that he was actually one of the most deeply beloved figures in the entire nation. Even local idol-worshipers who refused to change their religion pointed to Bowen as the ultimate living example of who Jesus Christ was. He hadn't failed; he had planted seeds so deep that they fundamentally shifted the spiritual soil of a nation. 

 Moving Past the Metric of "Success" It is easy to look at these journals and label their feelings as a lack of faith or unbelief. But the truth is, this is simply the raw, honest language of human exhaustion. Feelings are fickle. They come and they go. If you measure your standing with God based on your current emotional state or your visible track record, you will constantly feel like a failure. 

Instead, the Apostle Paul points us to a completely different metric in the New Testament: “The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” (Galatians 5:6) We don't stay the course, persevere, and keep showing up because we are guaranteed a standing ovation or an impressive spreadsheet of results. We do it because we are captured by something bigger. 

As Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:14: "For Christ’s love compels us, because we are convinced that one died for all..." Driven by Love, Not Results Christ’s love is what fueled Paul’s extraordinary, relentless zeal. He wasn't driven by a desire to build a massive personal brand or see immediate, flawless statistics. He was completely overmastered and influenced by the radical love Jesus demonstrated by dying for all people. 

That sacrificial love was the exact spark that urged Paul—and Bowen, and Livingstone—into a lifestyle of radical self-denial. They didn't labor because it felt rewarding every day; they labored because they were impelled by the love of a Savior who had already given everything for them.

 If you feel like you are failing today, change your metric. God does not demand an flawless spreadsheet of visible success. He looks for a heart where faith is actively expressing itself in love for Christ and His church.

 Keep loving. Keep serving. Leave the scoreboard to Him. What about you?  Have you ever experienced a season where your hard work felt completely invisible or useless? 

How does shifting your focus from "results" to "love" change how you view your current circumstances?

 Let's talk about in the comments section.