When Heaven Steps In

About a week ago, while I was out and about, I stopped for gas, nothing out of the ordinary… just another moment in a busy day. I was about to walk into the store to grab a snack when I felt it… a quiet, gentle impression deep within me to stop. Not loud. Not urgent. Just a still whisper: wait.

So I did.

Less than a second later, a jeep came flying past me and whipped into a parking spot right in front of the store. It missed me by what felt like a breath… a fraction of an inch. Close enough that I knew, had I taken one more step, the outcome would have been very different.

A man and his wife got out of the vehicle. His wife was visibly shaken, apologizing over and over again. I just looked at them, smiled, and forgave them as they held the door open for me. There was no fear in me… none at all. Just a calm that didn’t come from me.

I’ve been sitting with that moment ever since in wonder.

It felt as though the Lord Himself had placed His hand in front of me… holding me back at just the right time. It brings me to tears when I think about it too long… because this is how He loves us. Quietly and constantly. Faithfully watching, even when we are unaware.

“He will give His angels charge over you, to keep you in all your ways.” — Psalm 91:11

The man didn’t see me until it was too late… but God saw me the whole time. Not just me… but them too. His mercy covered us both in a moment that could have turned into something devastating. What the enemy may have intended for harm was stopped before it ever had the chance to take shape.

How many times has He done this for us… and we never even knew?

There is a tenderness in realizing that we are never truly unguarded. Never unseen. Never alone.

Today, I’m just grateful. Grateful for the whisper that says “wait.” Grateful for the unseen hand that protects, and grateful for a God who keeps His children safe… over and over again.

Father, thank You for Your protection that surrounds me even when I am unaware. Thank You for the quiet ways You intervene, for the moments You hold me back, and for the mercy that covers what I cannot see. Teach me to trust Your voice, even when it is gentle. Keep my heart aware of Your presence, and fill me with gratitude for the ways You continually preserve my life. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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The Illusion of Safety

There are moments when we feel safe simply because everything around us looks calm.

Nothing pressing. Nothing obvious. Nothing threatening.

Yet, Scripture reminds us that not all danger announces itself.

Sometimes it is hidden… quiet… waiting.

That’s what makes presumption so dangerous. It doesn’t feel like rebellion. It feels like ease. Like familiarity. Like confidence that slowly drifts into carelessness.

There have been seasons in my life where everything felt calm. Nothing pressing. Nothing obvious. Nothing threatening. And in that calm, I drifted. Not into obvious sin, but into quiet neglect. Prayer became shorter. Discernment became duller. I stopped asking the Lord before stepping into conversations, decisions, and situations. I assumed I was safe.

But safety without vigilance is not safety at all.

The battlefield does not disappear simply because I’ve grown familiar with it. The enemy does not retreat simply because I carry the name “Christian.” If anything, Scripture calls me deeper into awareness, not away from it. This life was never meant to be lived casually. It was meant to be lived watchfully… prayerfully… dependent.

I was reminded of this through a line that stayed with me:

“The error of ‘assumption’ or ‘presumption’ on a field of battle is catastrophic! Walking casually down a city street where it is ‘presumed’ there are no more enemy insurgents is often a regrettable choice. Similarly, it would be an exceptionally regrettable choice to ‘presume’ that simply because we bear the name ‘Christian’ we can stroll in oblivion through enemy-held territory unscathed.” — Jamie Walden, Omega Dynamics

That truth settles deep.

Spiritually, we are not walking through neutral ground. We are walking through enemy territory that requires awareness… dependence… and discernment. The danger is not always in what I can see. Sometimes it is in what I assume is no longer there.

David understood this tension. He had walked closely with God, seen His faithfulness, known His presence. And yet, he still prayed:

“Keep back your servant also from presumptuous sins; let them not have dominion over me! Then I shall be blameless and innocent of great transgression.” — Psalm 19:13

That prayer humbles me.

It reminds me that even a heart that loves God can drift if it is not continually yielded. That I am not above blind spots. That I am not immune to subtle compromise. Presumption says, “I’m fine.” Humility says, “Lord, keep me.”

There is a difference between confidence in God and carelessness in His presence. True confidence draws me closer. It keeps me listening. It keeps me dependent. Presumption distances me. It assumes I already know, already see, already understand.

But I don’t.

I don’t want to walk through enemy territory with my guard down, assuming I won’t be touched. I don’t want to rely on yesterday’s obedience to carry me through today’s battles. I don’t want to confuse familiarity with faithfulness.

What I want is to remain aware. That is the posture I want to carry.

I want to walk with a quiet sensitivity to the Holy Spirit, to pause when He nudges, to pray before I proceed and to stay teachable, even in places I think I’ve already mastered.

The safest place is not where I feel strongest. It is where I remain most dependent.

Maybe that is the invitation hidden in all of this… not to live in fear of the battlefield, but to live in constant awareness of the One who walks with me through it. To trade presumption for surrender. To trade assumption for attentiveness. To trade casual steps for intentional ones.
The illusion of safety is often where vigilance fades.

I don’t want to walk casually through places where I should be prayerful. I don’t want to rely on yesterday’s strength for today’s battle.

I want to stay close. Listening. Aware. Led.

Lord, keep me from the quiet drift into presumption. Where I have grown casual, awaken me again. Teach me to walk watchfully, to remain dependent, and to stay close to Your voice. Guard my heart from what I cannot see, and lead me in truth. Let me not mistake familiarity for safety. Keep me near, keep me aware, and keep me faithful. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Illusion of Safety

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The Everyday Nature of Worship

Worship is often reduced to a moment in a church service. The music begins, the lyrics appear on a screen, hands lift, voices rise, and for many people that becomes their definition of worship. But when I read Scripture slowly and honestly, it becomes clear that worship in the Bible is far bigger than a song.

Singing can certainly be an expression of worship. The Psalms are filled with songs that lift praise to God. Psalm 95:1 says, “O come, let us sing unto the Lord: let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation.” There is something beautiful about voices joining together in gratitude and reverence. But Scripture never presents singing as the whole of worship. It is only one small part of a much deeper posture of the heart.

Worship, in the biblical sense, is about alignment.

Jesus said something striking when He spoke to the woman at the well. In John 4:23–24 He said, “But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship him. God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.” That statement shifts worship away from location, ritual, or performance. Worship becomes something internal before it is ever external. It is the heart recognizing God for who He truly is and responding with sincerity, humility, and obedience.

This means worship can happen in quiet places where no music is playing at all.

When someone chooses forgiveness instead of bitterness, that can be worship. When a person humbles themselves and repents before God, that can be worship. When someone obeys the Lord even when it costs them something, that is deeply worshipful. Romans 12:1 captures this beautifully: “I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.” In other words, a life surrendered to God becomes an offering laid on the altar.

That kind of worship cannot be confined to a church building or a playlist.

I’ve come to realize that worship often looks very ordinary from the outside. It looks like quiet faithfulness. It looks like choosing truth when deception would be easier. It looks like honoring God in the unseen places where nobody applauds. The psalmist writes in Psalm 51:17, “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.” God is not looking for perfect voices. He is looking for surrendered hearts.

The more I walk with the Lord, the more I see that worship is woven into the small decisions of everyday life. It shows up in gratitude when circumstances are hard. It appears in trust when outcomes are uncertain. It grows in quiet moments of prayer when no one else is around.

Songs can lead us into worship, but they are not the destination.

True worship begins when the heart bows before God and says, sincerely and without reservation, “You are worthy.” And when that posture takes root, it doesn’t end when the music stops. It continues into the way we speak, the way we forgive, the way we serve, and the way we live.

A life fully yielded to Christ becomes the song.

Father,

Teach me what true worship really is. Help me not to limit worship to a moment of music, but to live a life that honors You in every decision, every word, and every hidden place of my heart. Create in me a humble and surrendered spirit. When my heart drifts, draw me back into alignment with Your truth. Let my obedience, my repentance, my gratitude, and my trust become an offering that is pleasing to You. May my life reflect Your goodness in the quiet places where no one else sees. And may everything I do point back to the One who is worthy of all honor, glory, and praise.

In Jesus’ name, amen.