Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

God Hears Before We See

Exodus 2:23–25 (ESV)
“During those many days the king of Egypt died, and the people of Israel groaned because of their slavery and cried out for help. Their cry for rescue from slavery came up to God. And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. God saw the people of Israel, and God knew.”

Exodus 2 is a chapter filled with hidden movement.

Moses is born under the shadow of Pharaoh’s death sentence. His mother hides him as long as she can, and when she can hide him no longer, she places him in a basket among the reeds by the river. From a human perspective, it looks desperate. It looks fragile. It looks uncertain.

But God is working.

Pharaoh’s daughter finds the child. Moses’ sister is nearby. Moses’ own mother ends up nursing him. The very child Pharaoh wanted destroyed is preserved inside Pharaoh’s own household.

That is the providence of God.

But the chapter does not move in a straight line. Moses grows up, sees the suffering of his people, and tries to respond. He kills an Egyptian who was beating a Hebrew, and then he runs for his life. Suddenly the deliverer we know God is raising up is in the wilderness of Midian.

Again, from the outside, it may look like everything has taken a wrong turn.

But God is still working.

That is one of the themes that stands out in Exodus 2. So much of what God is doing is not obvious in the moment. Moses’ mother could not see the whole story when she placed him in the basket. Moses could not see the whole story when he fled Egypt. Israel could not see the whole story while they were groaning under slavery.

But the chapter ends with one of the most comforting pictures of God’s care.

God heard.
God remembered.
God saw.
God knew.

Those words matter.

The people of Israel were suffering, and it may have felt like heaven was silent. They were groaning under the weight of slavery, crying out for rescue, wondering how long this would continue. But their cries were not ignored. Their pain was not unseen. Their suffering was not forgotten.

God heard them before they saw the answer.

As I think about this passage, I am also thinking back to the message I preached on Sunday morning. We talked about Mary and the way she was given the assignment of being the mother of the Son of God. What an incredible calling. What an overwhelming assignment. But even though she received that assignment from the Lord, she did not know the full picture.

Mary did not know every detail of what would unfold.

She did not know all the ramifications of her obedience. She did not know everything that would happen through the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus. She could not have fully understood the sacrifice of the cross, the birth of the church, or the fact that generations later, in 2026, we would still be talking about her obedience and reading Scripture shaped by the story God was writing through her life.

Mary is a powerful case study, but that same truth reaches into each one of our lives.

Most of the time, we cannot see the full picture of what God is doing.

But the picture is not the goal.

Obedience is the goal.

That is hard for us because we like clarity. We like to know where things are going. We like to see the outcome before we take the step. We want God to show us the whole picture so we can decide whether or not we feel comfortable moving forward.

But that is not usually how faith works.

Moses’ mother did not have the whole picture when she placed him in the basket. Israel did not have the whole picture when they cried out under slavery. Mary did not have the whole picture when she said yes to the Lord. And we often do not have the whole picture when God calls us to trust Him.

But not seeing the full picture does not mean God is not at work.

That is the reminder we need.

Just because we cannot see His hand yet does not mean He has not heard our cry. Just because the answer has not arrived yet does not mean God has forgotten His promise. Just because the situation still feels heavy does not mean God is absent from the story.

God heard.
God remembered.
God saw.
God knew.

And when Scripture says God remembered His covenant, it does not mean He had forgotten and suddenly recalled it. It means God was acting in faithfulness to what He had promised. His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob was still intact. Pharaoh could not erase it. Slavery could not cancel it. Time could not weaken it. Suffering could not make it void.

God was still faithful.

So today, if you are in a season where you are crying out but do not yet see the answer, take comfort in Exodus 2. God is not distant from your pain. He is not unaware of your situation. He is not confused by the delay. He is not late to the story.

He hears before you see.

And sometimes, while we are waiting for God to show us the full picture, He is inviting us to take the next step of obedience. He may be preserving. He may be positioning. He may be shaping. He may be preparing a deliverance that has not yet appeared.

The story is not over just because the answer is not visible yet.

Because the God who hears, remembers, sees, and knows is still at work.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You hear us even before we see the answer. Help us trust You when we do not have the full picture. Give us the faith to obey even when the way forward is unclear. Remind us that You see, You know, and You are faithful to Your promises. Help us believe that You are still working, even when we cannot yet see it. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

God Is Still Working When Pressure Increases

Exodus 1:12 (ESV)
“But the more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and the more they spread abroad. And the Egyptians were in dread of the people of Israel.”

Exodus 1 opens with a major shift.

Genesis ended with Joseph in a place of honor. God had used him to preserve many lives, including his own family. But by the time Exodus begins, generations have passed, Joseph is gone, and a new king rises over Egypt who does not know Joseph.

That one detail changes everything.

The people of Israel had entered Egypt as a family, but now they have grown into a people. God had been faithful to His promise. He was multiplying them, increasing them, and building them into a nation. But their growth created fear in the heart of Pharaoh.

So Pharaoh responds with oppression.

He enslaves them. He burdens them. He makes their lives bitter with hard service. And eventually, the pressure turns even darker as Pharaoh commands that the Hebrew baby boys be killed.

This is a heavy chapter.

But right in the middle of it is one of the most powerful lines in the passage: “But the more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and the more they spread abroad.”

That is such a picture of the faithfulness of God.

Pharaoh tried to crush what God was growing, but he could not stop the promise of God. The pressure was real. The suffering was real. The injustice was real. But none of it had the power to cancel what God had spoken.

That is something we need to remember.

There are seasons where pressure increases, and it can be easy to assume that means God has stopped working. When life gets harder, when opposition rises, when doors close, when burdens increase, when the road feels more difficult than expected, we can begin to wonder if something has gone wrong.

But Exodus 1 reminds us that increased pressure does not mean God’s promise has disappeared.

Sometimes the very place where the enemy tries to bring destruction becomes the place where God continues to bring growth.

One of the places I have seen this is in counseling. There are times when I sit with a couple, a family, or an individual, and things seem to get harder before they get better. The conversations become more honest. The wounds come closer to the surface. Patterns that have been hidden or ignored finally get named. And in the moment, it can feel like the pressure is increasing because something is going wrong.

But sometimes the pressure is increasing because something is finally coming into the light.

It reminds me of someone digging through a wall. From their side, all they can see is the wall in front of them. They are tired. Their hands hurt. They have been digging for what feels like forever. It still looks solid. It still feels like nothing has changed.

But what they cannot see is that they may only be inches away from breaking through.

That is how healing can feel sometimes.

You may feel like you are stuck because all you can see is the wall. But God may be doing more than you realize. He may be bringing truth to the surface. He may be softening hearts. He may be exposing what needs to be healed. He may be preparing a breakthrough that is closer than it feels.

Sometimes things feel heavier right before they become clearer.

That does not mean hardship is easy. It does not mean oppression is good. It does not mean pain should be minimized. The suffering of Israel was real, and God saw it. But even in a chapter filled with pain, fear, and injustice, we can see that God was still working.

He was preserving His people.

He was keeping His promise.

He was preparing a deliverer.

And what stands out to me is that the enemy’s strategy was rooted in fear. Pharaoh looked at the growth of God’s people and became afraid. So he tried to control what he could not stop. He tried to dominate what he could not destroy.

But God was not intimidated by Pharaoh.

That is good news.

Because there are moments in our own lives when the pressure feels bigger than the promise. The problem feels louder than the truth. The burden feels heavier than our strength. But Exodus 1 reminds us that God is not absent in those seasons.

He is still working, even when the pressure increases.

So today, if you feel like the weight has gotten heavier, do not assume God has walked away. If the season feels harder than expected, do not assume the promise has failed. If the enemy seems loud, do not forget that God is still sovereign.

You may be closer to breakthrough than you realize.

The same God who multiplied His people under pressure is still able to sustain His people today.

Because pressure may reveal the battle.

But it cannot cancel the promise.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You are faithful even when life feels heavy. Help us trust You in seasons of pressure, opposition, and uncertainty. Remind us that difficulty does not mean You are absent and that no enemy can cancel what You have spoken. When things feel harder before they get clearer, give us faith to keep trusting You. Strengthen our hearts, preserve our faith, and help us believe that You are still working even when the pressure increases. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

The Sword of the Spirit

Ephesians 6:17 (ESV)
“and take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God,”

The final piece of armor Paul names is the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.

Up to this point, Paul has walked through pieces of armor that protect and prepare the believer. The belt of truth holds everything together. The breastplate of righteousness guards the heart. The shoes of the gospel of peace steady our feet. The shield of faith extinguishes the flaming darts of the evil one. The helmet of salvation protects the mind.

But now Paul places a sword in the hand of the believer.

And he tells us exactly what it is.

The sword of the Spirit is the word of God.

That matters because when it comes to spiritual warfare, a lot of times we resort back to the methods we have historically known in our lives. When attacks come, we often reach for what feels familiar. Sometimes we try to fight with willpower. We tell ourselves we are just going to be stronger, do better, and push harder. Sometimes we try to fight with intellect. We think if we can reason our way through every possible angle, we can finally win the battle. Sometimes we stay so busy that we try to outrun what is happening in our hearts. Sometimes we just keep trying harder and harder and harder, without ever actually standing on the word of God.

But spiritual battles require spiritual weapons.

This is a completely different battle, and it requires a completely different weapon.

You cannot defeat lies with distraction. You cannot defeat temptation with busyness. You cannot defeat fear with sheer willpower. You cannot defeat spiritual darkness with human strength alone.

We need the appropriate weapon for the appropriate scenario.

And God has given us His Word.

The Word of God is not just something we study. It is something we stand on. It is something we cling to. It is something we speak over our lives. It is something we use to discern truth from lies. It is something that cuts through confusion and brings us back to what God has actually said.

That is exactly what we see in the life of Jesus.

When Jesus was tempted in the wilderness, He did not answer the enemy with emotion, opinion, or personal preference. He answered with Scripture. Again and again, He said, “It is written.” The Son of God Himself modeled for us the power and necessity of standing on the Word of God when the enemy attacks.

That should tell us something.

If Jesus used the Word in the wilderness, we should not expect to stand faithfully without it.

So when fear says, “You are alone,” the Word reminds us that God will never leave us or forsake us. When shame says, “Your past defines you,” the Word reminds us that if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. When temptation says, “This will satisfy you,” the Word reminds us that sin always overpromises and underdelivers. When anxiety says, “Everything is out of control,” the Word reminds us to cast our cares on Him because He cares for us.

The sword of the Spirit reminds us that God has not left us defenseless.

He has spoken.

And His Word is living, active, true, trustworthy, and sufficient for the battles we face.

So today, ask yourself what weapon you have been reaching for.

Have you been trying to fight spiritual battles with human strength alone? Have you been leaning only on willpower, busyness, distraction, intellect, or trying harder? Or are you allowing the Word of God to shape how you stand, how you fight, how you resist, and how you remain faithful?

Because the battle is real.

But so is the weapon God has placed in your hand.

Prayer
Lord, thank You for the gift of Your Word. Help us stop trying to fight spiritual battles with the wrong weapons. Teach us to stand on Scripture, trust what You have spoken, and use Your Word to resist lies, temptation, fear, shame, and discouragement. Give us hunger for Your Word and wisdom to apply it in every battle we face. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

The Helmet of Salvation

Ephesians 6:17 (ESV)
“and take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God,”

The next piece of the armor of God is the helmet of salvation.

A helmet protects the head. That may seem obvious, but spiritually speaking, it gives us a powerful picture. So much of the battle we face begins in the mind. The enemy knows that if he can get into our thoughts, he can begin to shape the way we see God, ourselves, others, and the future.

That is why Paul tells us to take the helmet of salvation.

Salvation is not just something we look back on as the moment we were saved. Salvation is also something that guards us right now. It reminds us that we belong to Jesus. It reminds us that our sins have been forgiven. It reminds us that our identity has been changed. It reminds us that our future is secure. It reminds us that we are not fighting for victory, but from the victory Christ has already won.

And we need that truth because the mind can become a battlefield very quickly.

One of the interesting things about the battles people lose in their minds is that they are often specific to their own personal mind. For one person, it may be overthinking to the point of paralysis by analysis. They think through every possibility, every outcome, every angle, and eventually feel stuck. For someone else, it may be fear that becomes so heavy they feel crippled by it. They know what they should do, but fear keeps them from moving.

For another person, the battle may be shame. They cannot seem to get out of the past. They keep replaying what they did, what they regret, what they wish they could change, or what someone else said about them. Someone else may be constantly anxious about the future, carrying the weight of things that have not even happened yet.

And the list could go on.

Some battle insecurity. Some battle discouragement. Some battle comparison. Some battle doubt. Some battle thoughts that tell them they are not loved, not useful, not forgiven, not called, or not enough.

That is why the helmet of salvation is so important.

Because salvation speaks truth to the mind.

When shame says, “You are still defined by your past,” salvation says, “You have been forgiven in Christ.” When fear says, “You are on your own,” salvation says, “You belong to the Lord.” When anxiety says, “The future is out of control,” salvation says, “Your life is held by the One who conquered sin and death.” When insecurity says, “You are not enough,” salvation says, “Christ is enough, and you are secure in Him.”

The helmet of salvation protects our minds by anchoring our thoughts in what Jesus has already done.

That does not mean every anxious thought disappears immediately. It does not mean we never struggle mentally, emotionally, or spiritually. It does not mean the battle is not real.

But it does mean the battle has a foundation.

We do not have to fight the thoughts in our minds with our own strength alone. We fight by remembering the gospel. We fight by preaching truth to ourselves. We fight by bringing our thoughts under the lordship of Christ. We fight by refusing to let fear, shame, anxiety, or insecurity be the loudest voice in our lives.

So today, pay attention to the battle in your mind.

Where does the enemy most often try to attack your thoughts? Is it fear? Shame? Overthinking? Anxiety? Insecurity? Doubt? Discouragement?

Whatever it is, do not leave your mind unprotected.

Take the helmet of salvation.

Remember who saved you. Remember who holds you. Remember who defines you. Remember where your hope is found.

Because your mind does not have to be ruled by fear, shame, or anxiety.

Your mind can be guarded by the salvation you have in Jesus.

Prayer
Lord, thank You for the gift of salvation. Help us to take the helmet of salvation and guard our minds with the truth of what Jesus has done. When fear, shame, anxiety, insecurity, overthinking, or discouragement attacks our thoughts, remind us that we belong to You. Teach us to rest in the forgiveness, identity, security, and hope we have in Christ. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

The Shield of Faith

Ephesians 6:16 (ESV)
“In all circumstances take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming darts of the evil one;”

The next piece of the armor of God is the shield of faith.

Paul says, “In all circumstances take up the shield of faith.” That phrase matters because he does not say we only need faith in certain seasons. He does not say we only need faith when life gets hard. He says in all circumstances.

In every season, in every battle, in every temptation, in every moment of uncertainty, and in every place where the enemy tries to attack, we are called to take up the shield of faith.

The image Paul gives is powerful. He describes the attacks of the evil one as flaming darts. These are not harmless distractions. They are fiery attacks meant to wound, spread, and consume. A dart may begin in one place, but if it catches fire, it can quickly affect everything around it.

That is often how spiritual attacks work. A thought can turn into fear. Fear can become anxiety. A wound can become bitterness. Comparison can become insecurity. Temptation can become compromise. Failure can become shame. A question can become doubt. A discouraging moment can become despair.

And what is always interesting to me is that the darts the enemy throws often seem to hit people in their weakest spot.

Whether it is fear, doubt, shame, comparison, discouragement, temptation, anxiety, or anything else, the very thing someone already struggles with is often where the enemy attacks. He knows where we are tender. He knows where we are tired. He knows where we are tempted to believe lies. He knows where past wounds still feel fresh. He knows where discouragement can catch fire quickly.

And it is at that point that we need the shield of faith.

Faith is not pretending the dart was not fired. Faith is not pretending the battle is not real. Faith is not pretending we never feel fear, doubt, temptation, or anxiety. Faith is trusting that the Lord is able to protect us in the very place where we feel vulnerable.

That is why the shield matters.

Paul does not say faith keeps the darts from coming. He says faith extinguishes them. The attack may be real, but it does not have to consume you. The lie may be loud, but it does not have to define you. The temptation may be strong, but it does not have to master you. The discouragement may be heavy, but it does not have to have the final word.

Faith lifts our eyes back to God. It reminds us that even when we feel afraid, God is still faithful. Even when we feel weak, God is still strong. Even when we feel accused, Christ has covered us. Even when we do not understand everything, we can trust the One who holds everything.

That is not weak faith.

That is battle-ready faith.

And sometimes taking up the shield of faith is a very practical act. It is choosing to pray when anxiety rises. It is choosing to open God’s Word when lies get loud. It is choosing to call someone trusted when temptation feels strong. It is choosing to remember God’s past faithfulness when the present feels uncertain. It is choosing to stand on what is true even when your emotions are trying to pull you somewhere else.

So today, pay attention to where the darts tend to land.

Where does the enemy most often attack you? Is it fear? Shame? Comparison? Discouragement? Temptation? Anxiety? Doubt? Bitterness?

Do not ignore it.

Take up the shield of faith.

Because faith does not mean the enemy stops firing.

Faith means the fire does not get to consume you.

Prayer
Lord, help us to take up the shield of faith in all circumstances. Show us where the enemy most often tries to attack our hearts and minds. Strengthen our faith in the places where we feel weak, vulnerable, or weary. Teach us to trust You when fear, shame, doubt, temptation, anxiety, or discouragement comes against us. Thank You that the attacks of the enemy do not have the final word. You are our protector, our strength, and our confidence. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

The Shoes of the Gospel of Peace

Ephesians 6:15 (ESV)
“and, as shoes for your feet, having put on the readiness given by the gospel of peace.”

The next piece of the armor of God is the shoes of the gospel of peace.

At first, shoes may not seem like the most impressive part of the armor, but they are absolutely necessary. A soldier could have a belt, a breastplate, a shield, a helmet, and a sword, but if his feet were not prepared, he would struggle to stand firm and move forward.

Shoes gave stability.

They helped the soldier stand his ground. They helped him move across difficult terrain. They helped him remain ready for whatever was in front of him.

So when Paul says to put on “the readiness given by the gospel of peace,” he is showing us that the gospel does not just save us. It steadies us.

And that matters because peace is something many people are desperately searching for.

Unfortunately, we have been cultured to believe that our peace comes from our circumstances. We think we will have peace when the schedule slows down, when the conflict ends, when the finances work out, when the diagnosis changes, when the relationship gets better, when the future becomes clearer, or when everything around us finally feels stable.

But that kind of peace is fragile.

If our peace is built on circumstances, then our peace will rise and fall with circumstances. When life is calm, we feel steady. When life gets hard, we fall apart. When people approve of us, we feel secure. When people criticize us, we feel shaken. When doors open, we feel confident. When doors close, we feel anxious.

But biblical peace is deeper than that.

Peace is not based on external things. Peace is based on the internal presence of Jesus.

That does not mean life will always feel easy. It does not mean we will never grieve, struggle, hurt, or feel overwhelmed. But it does mean that the believer has access to a peace that is not controlled by what is happening around them.

That is the power of the gospel.

Through Jesus, we have peace with God. Our sin has been dealt with. Our shame has been covered. Our relationship with God has been restored. We are no longer enemies of God. We are sons and daughters. We are held by grace. We are secure in Christ.

And because we have peace with God, we can walk in the peace of God.

That is the theological foundation underneath this piece of armor.

The peace of the gospel is not circumstantial relief. It is covenantal security. It is the settled confidence that because Christ has reconciled us to God, no external battle has the authority to separate us from the presence, love, and faithfulness of God.

That is what steadies our feet.

The gospel gives us a firm place to stand when everything around us feels uncertain. It reminds us that our deepest problem has already been answered in Jesus. It reminds us that even when we do not know what tomorrow holds, we know who holds us. It reminds us that we are not walking into difficulty alone.

Jesus goes with us.

And when the peace of Christ steadies us internally, we become ready externally.

Ready to walk into hard conversations. Ready to step into uncertain places. Ready to bring calm into chaos. Ready to carry the gospel into anxious rooms. Ready to respond with faith instead of fear. Ready to move forward even when the terrain is difficult.

Because peace is not just something we receive.

Peace is something we walk in.

And peace is something we carry.

So today, ask yourself where you have been looking for peace. Are you waiting for everything around you to change before you can be steady within? Are you trying to build your peace on circumstances that constantly shift? Or are you standing in the peace that comes from the gospel of Jesus Christ?

Because the world can offer temporary calm.

But only Jesus gives peace that can stand in the battle.

Prayer
Lord, thank You for the peace we have through Jesus. Help us stop looking to circumstances to give us what only You can provide. Steady our hearts with the truth of the gospel. Teach us to walk in Your peace, carry Your peace, and stand firm even when life feels uncertain. Let the presence of Jesus within us be stronger than the trouble around us. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

The Breastplate of Righteousness

Ephesians 6:14 (ESV)
“Stand therefore, having fastened on the belt of truth, and having put on the breastplate of righteousness,”

Paul’s next piece of armor is the breastplate of righteousness.

The breastplate was designed to protect the vital parts of the soldier, especially the heart. That image matters because Scripture often uses the heart to describe the center of who we are. Our desires, affections, thoughts, motives, and inner life.

So when Paul tells believers to put on the breastplate of righteousness, he is reminding us that our hearts need protection.

And one of the ways we often try to protect our hearts is through approval.

We want to be liked. We want to be accepted. We want to be affirmed. We want to know that we are part of something. And we live in a culture that is geared toward that. From the office, to family, to social media, to church, there is constant pressure to measure our worth by how others respond to us.

Did they notice me?

Did they affirm me?

Did they include me?

Did they like it?

Did they approve?

And if we are not careful, approval becomes the armor we try to wear.

But approval is fragile armor.

It cannot protect the heart for very long because it is always changing. One day people celebrate you. Another day they criticize you. One day you feel included. Another day you feel overlooked. One day you feel confident. Another day one comment, one post, one conversation, or one moment of rejection can shake you deeply.

That is why we need something stronger.

We need the breastplate of righteousness.

The righteousness Paul is talking about is not self-righteousness. It is not pretending we are better than we are. It is not performing for God or people. It begins with what Christ has done for us. Through Jesus, we are made right with God. Our standing before Him is not based on our popularity, performance, reputation, or ability to be approved by others.

It is based on Christ.

That truth guards the heart.

Because when I know I am accepted by God through Jesus, I do not have to live desperate for the approval of everyone else. When I know I have been made right with God, I do not have to build my identity on likes, applause, compliments, or inclusion. When I know my heart belongs to Christ, I can serve people without being controlled by what they think of me.

That does not mean encouragement does not matter. It does. It does not mean relationships do not matter. They do. It does not mean belonging does not matter. It absolutely does.

But none of those things were meant to be our righteousness.

Only Jesus can carry that weight.

So today, pay attention to what you are using to guard your heart. Are you wearing the fragile armor of approval, or are you resting in the righteousness of Christ? Are you letting people’s opinions define your worth, or are you standing firm in who God says you are?

Because approval may feel good for a moment.

But righteousness protects the heart.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that through Jesus we are made right with You. Help us stop trying to protect our hearts with approval, performance, reputation, or acceptance from others. Teach us to rest in the righteousness of Christ and to live from the security of being accepted by You. Guard our hearts and help us stand firm in who You say we are. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

The Belt of Truth

Ephesians 6:14 (ESV)
“Stand therefore, having fastened on the belt of truth, and having put on the breastplate of righteousness,”

Over the next few days, we are going to spend some time walking through the armor of God in Ephesians 6. This is also a bit of a piggyback off the last sermon I preached, where we focused on Paul’s command in verse 13 to stand firm. Before Paul ever names the individual pieces of armor, he tells believers to take up the whole armor of God so that when the evil day comes, they may be able to withstand, and having done all, to stand firm.

That phrase matters.

Paul is not calling believers to drift, panic, or collapse. He is calling them to stand firm. And as he begins to describe what that looks like, the first piece he mentions is the belt of truth.

That may seem like a small detail, but it matters. In the armor of a Roman soldier, the belt was not just decorative. It helped hold everything together. It gathered the garments so the soldier could move freely. It secured other pieces of the armor. It prepared the soldier to stand, move, and fight.

So when Paul says to fasten on the belt of truth, he is showing us that truth is not optional in the life of a believer.

Truth holds everything together.

Before Paul talks about righteousness, peace, faith, salvation, or the sword of the Spirit, he begins with truth. Because if truth is loose, everything else becomes unstable. If truth is unclear, our identity becomes unclear. If truth is compromised, our decisions become compromised. If truth is ignored, we become vulnerable to deception.

And that is especially important because Paul is writing about spiritual warfare.

The enemy does not usually begin by trying to destroy everything all at once. Often, he begins by distorting truth. He whispers lies. He twists what God has said. He questions God’s goodness. He attacks our identity. He tries to get us to build our lives on feelings, fear, shame, comparison, or cultural pressure instead of the Word of God.

One of the lies so many people believe is that their past defines them.

They begin to think that what they did, what happened to them, what they regret, what they failed at, or what they walked through has the final word over who they are. And once that lie takes root, it can shape everything. It shapes how they see God. It shapes how they see themselves. It shapes how they pray. It shapes how they serve. It shapes whether they believe they can really move forward.

But the belt of truth reminds us that our entire spiritual standing is based on the truth of God, not the record of our past.

That is what prepares us to stand.

It is Him, not us.

We do not stand because we have a perfect story. We stand because we have a perfect Savior. We do not stand because we have earned our place before God. We stand because Jesus has made a way. We do not stand because our past is spotless. We stand because the truth of God is stronger than the accusations of the enemy.

That is why truth matters so much.

The belt of truth reminds us that we do not get to define reality by our emotions, circumstances, preferences, opinions, shame, or regret. We anchor our lives in what God has spoken. His Word tells us who He is. His Word tells us who we are. His Word tells us what is right. His Word tells us what is false. His Word gives us a firm place to stand when everything around us feels unstable.

And that is the command Paul gives: “Stand therefore.”

Not drift.

Not panic.

Not collapse.

Stand firm.

Stand firm with truth fastened around you. Stand firm when lies are loud. Stand firm when culture is confused. Stand firm when your emotions are all over the place. Stand firm when fear tries to rewrite the story. Stand firm when shame tries to name you. Stand firm when temptation tries to convince you that obedience is not worth it.

Because truth is not just information we believe.

Truth is something we put on.

It is something we fasten tightly to our lives. It shapes how we think, how we speak, how we respond, how we lead, how we parent, how we work, how we love, and how we follow Jesus.

So today, ask yourself what truth you are allowing to hold your life together.

Are you being shaped more by the Word of God or by the noise around you? Are you standing on what God has said, or are you being pulled by what you feel in the moment? Are there lies about your past, your identity, or your standing before God that need to be confronted with the truth of the gospel?

Because the life of faith is not held together by wishful thinking.

It is held together by truth.

Prayer
Lord, help us to fasten the belt of truth tightly around our lives. Teach us to recognize the lies of the enemy and stand firmly on what You have spoken. Remind us that our past does not define us and that our standing before You is based on the finished work of Jesus. Let Your truth shape our identity, our decisions, our relationships, and our faith. Give us courage to stand firm in truth when everything around us feels uncertain. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

When God Redeems the Whole Story

Genesis 50:20 (ESV)
“As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive, as they are today.”

Genesis 50 brings the book of Genesis to a close, and it ends with one of the most powerful declarations of God’s providence in all of Scripture.

Joseph’s brothers are afraid.

Their father Jacob has died, and now they wonder if Joseph will finally take revenge. For years, they had lived with the memory of what they had done. They had betrayed him, sold him, lied about him, and caused years of grief in their own family. And now that Jacob is gone, they assume Joseph may finally give them what they deserve.

But Joseph’s response is stunning.

“As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.”

Joseph does not deny what they did. He does not minimize the pain. He does not pretend it was harmless. He calls it what it was. Evil.

But he also sees something deeper.

He sees that their evil did not have the final word. Their betrayal did not have ultimate authority. Their sin was real, but it was not sovereign. God was sovereign.

That is the beauty of this passage.

Joseph is not saying that evil is good. He is saying that God is so good, so wise, so powerful, and so faithful that He can take what was meant for harm and weave it into His redemptive purpose.

That is not easy to believe when you are in the pit.

It is not easy to believe when you are falsely accused. It is not easy to believe when you are forgotten. It is not easy to believe when the story feels unfair, delayed, or broken. But when Joseph looks back over his life, he can see what he could not always see in the moment.

God was working.

Through the pit. Through Potiphar’s house. Through the prison. Through the waiting. Through the famine. Through the reunion. Through every twist and turn, God was not absent.

He was redeeming the whole story.

One of the things that is true for all of us is that hindsight is 20/20. Once we know how the story ends, we often see the season we were in completely differently. What felt confusing in the moment can make more sense later. What felt like a delay can later be seen as preparation. What felt like a closed door can later be recognized as protection. What felt like disappointment can become part of a testimony of God’s faithfulness.

But the challenge is learning to trust God before we know how the story ends.

That is where faith grows.

I have seen God’s faithfulness in the past, and because of that, I know I can count on it now when I reach those seasons again. I may not always know what God is doing in the moment. I may not always understand why something is happening the way it is happening. I may not be able to see how all the pieces fit together yet. But I can look back and remember that God has been faithful before.

And if He has been faithful before, I can trust Him to be faithful again.

That does not mean every season is easy. It does not mean every pain disappears quickly. It does not mean we always get immediate answers. But it does mean we are not walking through the unknown without a God who knows the end from the beginning.

Genesis 50 does not give us a shallow answer to deep pain.

It gives us a sovereign God.

A God who is able to work through what others meant for evil. A God who can bring life out of betrayal. A God who can use painful chapters for purposes we could not have imagined. A God who can take broken pieces and somehow make them part of a bigger story of grace.

And Joseph’s response shows us what healing can look like.

He does not live controlled by revenge. He does not stay trapped in bitterness. He does not let the worst thing done to him become the defining thing about him. Instead, he entrusts judgment to God and chooses mercy.

That is not weakness.

That is freedom.

Joseph was free because he trusted that God was the One holding the story. He did not have to repay evil with evil because he had seen the faithfulness of God turn sorrow into provision and pain into preservation.

So today, remember this.

The hardest parts of your story are not beyond the reach of God’s redemption.

What others meant for harm, God can still use for good. What felt wasted, God can still use. What felt delayed, God can still redeem. What felt like an ending, God may use as part of a greater purpose.

Because God does not just redeem moments.

He redeems the whole story.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You are sovereign over every part of our lives. Help us trust You with the chapters we do not understand. Remind us of Your past faithfulness when we are walking through present uncertainty. Heal the places where we have been hurt, free us from bitterness, and give us faith to believe that You can bring good even out of what was meant for harm. Teach us to walk in mercy, wisdom, and trust, knowing that You are redeeming the whole story. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

A Life That Leaves a Legacy

Genesis 49:28 (ESV)
“All these are the twelve tribes of Israel. This is what their father said to them as he blessed them, blessing each with the blessing suitable to him.”

Genesis 49 brings us to one of the final moments of Jacob’s life.

He gathers his sons together, and one by one, he speaks over them. Some of what he says is beautiful. Some of it is difficult. Some of it carries promise. Some of it carries the weight of past choices. But all of it reminds us that life leaves a legacy.

This chapter is not just about words spoken at the end of a life. It is about the story that has been formed throughout a life.

Jacob looks at his sons and speaks with honesty. He does not pretend their stories are all the same. Reuben’s instability is remembered. Simeon and Levi’s violence is named. Judah’s future is marked by kingship and promise. Joseph’s life is described with fruitfulness, strength, and blessing.

Each son receives words that connect to character, choices, history, and calling.

That is what makes this chapter so sobering.

Legacy is not built in a moment. It is built over time. It is built in patterns. It is built in decisions. It is built in what we do when we are under pressure. It is built in how we respond when we are hurt. It is built in how we handle responsibility, conflict, temptation, blessing, and disappointment.

As I ponder this, I think about one of the unique viewpoints I have into people’s lives. As a pastor, I have been able to have meaningful conversations with people in almost every season of life.

I have talked with children who are still discovering who they are and learning what it means to trust God in simple, honest ways.

I have talked with teenagers who are trying to figure out identity, friendships, pressure, faith, temptation, and the future.

I have talked with young adults who are stepping into independence, making major decisions, and trying to discern who God is calling them to become.

I have talked with newlyweds who are learning how to build a life together, how to communicate, how to forgive, and how to love in ways that are more than just feelings.

I have talked with young professionals who are trying to balance ambition, calling, work, family, finances, and faithfulness.

I have talked with people in midlife who are carrying heavy responsibilities, raising children, caring for aging parents, navigating careers, and wondering how to stay faithful when life feels full.

I have talked with parents who are raising teenagers and realizing that leadership in the home changes as children grow older. It becomes less about controlling every decision and more about shaping hearts, modeling faith, and staying connected.

I have talked with parents who are marrying off their kids and realizing that a new chapter is beginning. They are learning how to release, bless, celebrate, and trust God with the next generation in a new way.

I have talked with empty nesters who are asking what this next season is supposed to look like now that the house is quieter and the rhythms of life have changed.

I have talked with grandparents who carry both joy and concern as they watch their children raise children of their own. They want to encourage without controlling. They want to be present without overstepping. They want to pass on faith in a way that is meaningful and lasting.

And I have talked with great-grandparents, and even people nearing the end of life, who carry a kind of wisdom that only comes from decades of walking through joy, sorrow, success, failure, grief, change, and the faithfulness of God.

And when you listen closely, there is something powerful that often rises to the surface.

The people who have lived the longest rarely talk most about the things we are usually chasing.

They do not usually talk about needing more stuff. They do not usually talk about wishing they had spent more hours distracted and more time worrying about things that would not matter five years later.

They talk about people.

They talk about moments.

They talk about how fast it all went.

They talk about the gift of family, the importance of faith, the value of being present, and the need to redeem the time we have been given.

That kind of perspective matters.

Because whether you are 7 or 87, there is a gift in today.

There is a gift in the people God has placed around you. There is a gift in the conversations you get to have. There is a gift in the small moments you might be tempted to rush through. There is a gift in the ordinary day that may not seem significant now, but one day may become part of the legacy someone remembers.

So today, do not waste the gift of today.

Disconnect from the distractions that do not add value. Spend time with the people you love. Pay attention to what matters. Speak life. Practice faithfulness. Be present. Redeem the time.

Because the truth is, we are all leaving something behind. The question is not whether we will leave a legacy. The question is what kind of legacy we are leaving.

And Genesis 49 reminds us that the life we live today is shaping the story that will be told tomorrow.

But it also reminds us of God’s grace.

A faithful legacy does not require a perfect past. It requires a surrendered present.

Maybe today you look back and see things you wish had been different. Words you wish you had not said. Choices you wish you had not made. Patterns you wish you had broken sooner. But the grace of God meets us right there. He can redeem what is broken. He can reshape what has been unhealthy. He can help us build something different from this point forward.

So today, think about the story your life is telling.

What patterns are you building? What values are you passing on? What are the people closest to you learning from the way you live? What kind of faith are you modeling?

Because legacy is not just what people remember after we are gone.

Legacy is what people receive while we are here.

Prayer
Lord, help us to live with the kind of faithfulness that leaves a lasting legacy. Teach us to recognize the gift of today and to redeem the time You have given us. Help us disconnect from distractions that do not add value and be present with the people we love. Redeem what has been broken, strengthen what is good, and help us pass on faith, love, humility, and obedience to the people You have placed around us. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

Speaking Blessing Over the Next Generation

Genesis 48:15–16 (ESV)
“And he blessed Joseph and said, ‘The God before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac walked, the God who has been my shepherd all my life long to this day, the angel who has redeemed me from all evil, bless the boys; and in them let my name be carried on, and the name of my fathers Abraham and Isaac; and let them grow into a multitude in the midst of the earth.’”

Genesis 48 is a deeply meaningful chapter because Jacob is nearing the end of his life, and he is not simply looking backward. He is looking forward. Joseph brings his sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, to Jacob, and Jacob blesses them. This is more than a sentimental family moment. It is a generational moment. Jacob is speaking faith, identity, and promise over the next generation.

What stands out is how Jacob describes God. He calls Him “the God before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac walked,” and then he says, “the God who has been my shepherd all my life long to this day.” That is such a powerful statement. Jacob’s life was not simple. It was filled with conflict, wandering, loss, wrestling, fear, and uncertainty. And yet, looking back over the whole story, he can say, God has been my shepherd.

That is perspective.

Jacob is able to see that God was not just present in one season. God had been faithfully leading him through every season. Through the mistakes. Through the struggles. Through the transitions. Through the grief. Through the unknown. And now, at the end of his life, he is passing that testimony forward.

One of the interesting things about writing these devotionals is that they often come from my perspective. And my perspective is not only as a follower of Christ, but also as someone who is employed by the church. A lot of my faith experiences naturally revolve around ministry, preaching, leadership, and the church. But what I love about this passage is how high it ranks in terms of priority for me personally. As much as I love pouring into others, pouring into my own children is one of the greatest joys of my life.

And that is not just reserved for someone in a pastoral seat.

This is for any of us who have the privilege of influencing the next generation. Parents, grandparents, mentors, coaches, teachers, small group leaders, volunteers, friends. If God has placed someone younger in your life, then you have an opportunity to speak life, faith, and blessing over them.

Our words have weight.

The way we speak to our children matters. The way we speak to the next generation matters. We can speak fear, frustration, and limitation, or we can speak life, identity, courage, and faith. Jacob uses his words to connect Ephraim and Manasseh to the faithfulness of God. He is essentially saying, the God who has carried me is the God who can carry you.

That is what I want my children to know.

I want them to know that God is faithful. I want them to know that He has been my shepherd, and He will be theirs too. I want them to hear blessing spoken over them, not just correction. I want them to know that their identity is not found in performance, popularity, achievement, or comparison, but in the God who made them, loves them, and calls them by name.

So today, consider who God has placed in your life. Who needs to hear encouragement from you? Who needs to be reminded that God is faithful? Who needs someone to speak blessing over them?

Because one of the most powerful things we can do is take the faithfulness we have experienced and speak it into the lives of those coming behind us.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You have been our shepherd through every season. Help us to recognize Your faithfulness and pass that testimony forward. Teach us to speak words of life, blessing, and faith over the next generation. Help us to steward our influence well, beginning with those You have placed closest to us. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

Faithful With What God Provides

Genesis 47:12 (ESV)
“And Joseph provided his father, his brothers, and all his father’s household with food, according to the number of their dependents.”

Genesis 47 shows us the outworking of everything God has been building in Joseph’s life. The famine is severe. The land is struggling. Resources are scarce. But in the middle of that, Joseph is positioned exactly where he needs to be.

And what does he do with it?

He provides.

Not just for Egypt, but for his family. The same family that once betrayed him is now being sustained through him. That is a powerful picture of God’s redemption. Joseph did not use his position for revenge. He used it for stewardship. He understood that the authority, wisdom, and resources God had given him were not just for himself. They were meant to be used for the good of others.

That matters because every one of us has been entrusted with something. It may not be political authority in Egypt, but God has placed resources, influence, relationships, time, skills, and opportunities in our hands. The question is not simply what we have been given. The question is what we are doing with it.

I think the reality is that all of us have giftings that need to be discovered and shaped. God has placed something in each of us that is meant to be cultivated, developed, and used. And one of the beautiful things about those giftings is that when we lean into them, we not only experience fulfillment personally, but the people around us are blessed because of it.

That is how God designed it to work.

When our “why” is centered on serving others, everyone receives the blessing. We are blessed because we are living faithfully with what God has placed in us. Others are blessed because they receive the overflow of those gifts being used well.

Joseph’s life reminds us that provision is not just something we receive. It is something we steward.

There are seasons where God provides for us directly, and there are seasons where God provides through us for someone else. Part of spiritual maturity is recognizing that what God places in our hands is often meant to move through our hands.

Genesis 47 also reminds us that stewardship happens in real circumstances. Joseph is not managing abundance in an easy season. He is leading through famine. He is making decisions under pressure. He is helping people survive in a time when there is not enough. And yet, even there, God gives wisdom.

So today, look at what God has entrusted to you. Your gifts. Your voice. Your influence. Your time. Your resources. Your relationships. Ask Him how to use those things faithfully.

Because what God gives you is never just about you.

He blesses us so that we can be a blessing.

Prayer
Lord, thank You for everything You have entrusted to us. Help us to discover, develop, and faithfully use the gifts You have placed in our lives. Teach us to steward our resources, influence, time, and opportunities for Your glory and the good of others. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

God Goes With You

Genesis 46:3–4 (ESV)
“Then he said, ‘I am God, the God of your father. Do not be afraid to go down to Egypt, for there I will make you into a great nation. I myself will go down with you to Egypt, and I will also bring you up again, and Joseph’s hand shall close your eyes.’”

Genesis 46 is a transition moment.

Jacob is about to leave everything familiar and step into something unknown. Even though Joseph is in Egypt, this is still a massive move filled with uncertainty. And before he goes, God speaks.

“Do not be afraid… I will go with you.”

That is what Jacob needed most.

Not a full roadmap.
Not every detail.
Just the assurance of God’s presence.

And that is often how God works.

I remember when we were moving from the previous city we lived in to where we are now. We knew without a doubt that God was calling us into a new season, but we did not know where. Not the city, not the state, not even the country. We had ideas, but nothing was certain.

It felt very much like an Abraham moment. Go to the land I will show you.

We knew we were supposed to step out, so we began to move forward. We started preparing. We sold our home. We took real, tangible steps into the unknown. And it was not until we were actually moving in obedience that the details began to unfold.

That is how this works.

God often gives direction before He gives details.

He invites us to trust Him enough to move, and then as we step forward, He reveals what we need along the way.

Jacob had to go to Egypt.
We had to take steps forward.
And in both cases, God met us in the movement.

So today, if you feel like God is leading you into something new but you do not have all the answers, do not let that stop you. You do not need full clarity to take the next step.

You just need to trust that He goes with you.

Because His presence is more valuable than a detailed plan.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You go with us wherever You lead us. Help us to trust You even when we do not have all the details. Give us the courage to take the next step in obedience, knowing that You will guide us along the way. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

What Was Meant for Harm, God Used for Good

Genesis 45:5 (ESV)
“And now do not be distressed or angry with yourselves because you sold me here, for God sent me before you to preserve life.”

Genesis 45 is the moment everything comes to light. Joseph reveals who he is to his brothers, the very ones who betrayed him and sold him into slavery. They stand before him vulnerable and afraid, and Joseph has every reason to respond with anger.

But he doesn’t.

Instead, he responds with compassion. With forgiveness. And then he says something that changes the entire perspective of the story. “God sent me before you to preserve life.”

Joseph does not ignore what they did. He does not pretend it wasn’t wrong. But he sees something bigger than their actions. He sees the hand of God at work through it all.

That kind of perspective takes time.

Because in the moment, it rarely feels that way.

I remember a season in college when I was pursuing a specific leadership position that I really wanted. When I didn’t get it, I was crushed. It felt like a major setback, something that didn’t make sense at the time. But in hindsight, that moment led to some of the most formative experiences of my entire college journey. It opened the door for me to build deep relationships with a group of guys in a way that I would not have otherwise. The position I ended up in, the one I didn’t originally want, was exactly where God had me.

And now, looking back, I’m so thankful for it.

That is how God works.

Not that every painful moment is easy. Not that every disappointment makes sense right away. But over time, if we allow Him to shape our perspective, we begin to see that He was working even in the moments that felt like loss.

Joseph’s story reminds us that what others intend for harm, God is able to use for good. That does not minimize the pain, but it does magnify His power.

So today, if there is something in your past that still feels confusing or disappointing, ask God to help you see it through a different lens. Trust that He is able to redeem what you didn’t choose and use it for something greater than you could have planned.

Because His story is always bigger than the moment.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You are able to work through every situation, even the ones that felt painful or unfair. Help us to trust Your perspective and to see Your hand at work over time. Give us grateful hearts for the ways You have led us, even when we didn’t understand it at first. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

When You Step In for Someone Else

Genesis 44:33 (ESV)
“Now therefore, please let your servant remain instead of the boy as a servant to my lord, and let the boy go back with his brothers.”

Genesis 44 brings us to a moment of testing. Joseph has set up a situation where it appears that Benjamin is guilty. The brothers are faced with a decision. Years earlier, when Joseph was the one in trouble, they chose themselves. They abandoned him. They protected their own interests.

But now, something is different.

Judah steps forward.

And what he says reveals everything that has changed. He recounts the story, he feels the weight of what this would do to their father, and then he does something remarkable.

“Let me stay… let him go.”

This is not self-preservation.

This is sacrifice.

This is the evidence of transformation.

Judah, who once played a role in selling his brother, is now willing to give himself up for another. Something has changed in his heart, and it shows in his actions.

And this is where it meets us.

I think we often imagine moments like this as big, dramatic decisions. And sometimes they are. But more often than not, we have opportunities throughout our day to step in for someone else in much smaller ways. Moments that may seem insignificant to others, but carry real weight.

It might look like giving someone else credit.
It might look like stepping in to help when it’s inconvenient.
It might look like choosing patience instead of frustration.
It might look like carrying something so someone else doesn’t have to.

Those moments matter.

Because transformation is not just revealed in the big decisions. It is revealed in the consistent, everyday choices to put others before ourselves.

That is the heart we see in Judah.

And it points us to something even greater. A God who stepped in for us. A Savior who took our place.

So today, pay attention to the moments in front of you. The small opportunities. The quiet chances to serve, to sacrifice, to step in.

Because that is where a transformed life becomes visible.

Prayer
Lord, thank You for the example of sacrifice and love. Help us to see the opportunities in front of us to step in for others, even in small ways. Shape our hearts to reflect Yours, and give us the courage to choose others over ourselves. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

When You Finally Let Go

Genesis 43:14 (ESV)
“May God Almighty grant you mercy before the man, and may he send back your other brother and Benjamin. And as for me, if I am bereaved of my children, I am bereaved.”

Genesis 43 brings us into a moment of tension for Jacob. The famine has not let up. The food is gone again. And the only way forward is to return to Egypt. But there is a problem.

Benjamin.

Jacob has already lost Joseph, at least in his mind. The thought of losing another son is overwhelming. So he holds on tightly. He resists. He delays. He tries to control the situation by keeping Benjamin close.

And if we are honest, we understand that.

There are things in our lives that we hold onto tightly. Not because we are rebellious, but because we are afraid. Afraid of loss. Afraid of what might happen if we let go. Afraid of trusting God with something that feels too important.

But eventually, Jacob reaches a point where he can no longer control the situation.

And he lets go.

“May God Almighty grant you mercy…”

That is not a statement of control. That is a statement of surrender.

But here is where this gets really practical for us. A lot of times when we think about surrender, we think about one big, defining moment where we lay something down in a dramatic way. And while those moments absolutely do happen, more often than not, surrender shows up in the everyday.

It shows up in the small moments.

It looks like moving from one meeting to the next, from one responsibility to the next, and quietly saying, God, I’m going to give this my best, and I’m going to trust You with the outcome. It looks like praying as you go, inviting God into each decision, each conversation, each role you carry.

We are responsible for the input.

God is responsible for the output.

That kind of surrender may not feel dramatic, but it is deeply powerful. Because over time, it reshapes how we live. It moves us from control to trust, from anxiety to peace.

Jacob had a defining moment of surrender, but that same principle applies to our daily lives.

So today, if there is something you are holding onto, yes, bring it before the Lord. But also recognize that surrender is not just a one-time decision. It is a daily posture.

Give God your best.

And trust Him with the rest.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You are trustworthy in every situation. Help us not only to surrender in the big moments, but in the everyday details of our lives. Teach us to give You our best and trust You with the outcome. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

When God Brings It Back Up

Genesis 42:21 (ESV)

“Then they said to one another, ‘In truth we are guilty concerning our brother, in that we saw the distress of his soul, when he begged us and we did not listen. That is why this distress has come upon us.’”

Genesis 42 brings Joseph’s brothers back into the story. Years have passed since they sold him into slavery. Life has moved on. But now a famine hits, and the very thing they tried to move past is brought back in front of them. They stand before Joseph without realizing it, and in the middle of that moment, something begins to surface.

Conviction.

“We are guilty.”

That is a powerful moment, because it shows that even though time had passed, the weight of that decision had not fully disappeared. And now, God is bringing it back up. Not to shame them, but to bring them to a place of honesty.

That matters, because there are things in our lives that we can try to move past without ever truly dealing with them. We bury them. We ignore them. We tell ourselves it is behind us. But in His grace, God will often bring those things back to the surface. Because God won’t heal what we conceal.

I think all of us have been in that place before. A moment where conviction sets in on something specific. We know what we ought to do, but instead, we choose the easier, short-term path. We push it aside. We delay dealing with it.

But as we grow in our faith, as we are shaped more and more by Christ, something begins to shift. We start to recognize that ignoring conviction does not bring peace. It just postpones what needs to be addressed. And over time, we begin to lean into those moments instead of avoiding them.

Not because we have to earn anything. Salvation is not based on our works. But the freedom that comes from walking in obedience, from bringing things into the light, is worth far more than the temporary comfort of hiding them.

That is what Genesis 42 is showing us.

Conviction is not something to run from. It is something to respond to.

So today, if something is being brought back to your attention, do not push it aside. Do not ignore it. Bring it into the light. Be honest before God. Trust that He is not trying to shame you, but to restore you.

Because on the other side of honesty is freedom.

Prayer

Lord, thank You that conviction is an act of Your grace. Help us not to hide what You are revealing, but to bring it into the light. Give us the courage to respond with honesty, and lead us into the freedom that only You can give. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

When God Turns It Around

Genesis 41:14 (ESV)
“Then Pharaoh sent and called Joseph, and they quickly brought him out of the pit. And when he had shaved himself and changed his clothes, he came in before Pharaoh.”

Genesis 41 is a turning point.

After years of waiting, years of faithfulness in difficult places, years of being overlooked and forgotten, everything changes in a moment. Pharaoh has a dream that no one can interpret, and suddenly the cupbearer remembers Joseph. Just like that, Joseph is brought out of prison and into the presence of Pharaoh.

What took years to build happens in a moment.

And that is how God often works.

We walk through long seasons where nothing seems to be changing. Faithfulness feels hidden. Progress feels slow. And then suddenly, God moves in a way that shifts everything.

But here is what is important to notice. Joseph was ready.

When the moment came, he did not need to become someone different. He had already been formed in the waiting. The years in the pit, in Potiphar’s house, and in the prison had prepared him for that exact moment. And when Pharaoh asks him to interpret the dream, Joseph responds with humility, “It is not in me; God will give Pharaoh a favorable answer.”

Even in the moment of opportunity, Joseph points back to God.

I can think of a moment in my own life where this became very real. When we moved to Varina to start the church, there were so many things that suddenly clicked. Small moments, small lessons, small steps of obedience from years before all came together in a way that made sense in that season.

And it reminded me of something I have come to believe deeply.

What feels sudden is often the culmination of years of faithfulness.

From the outside, it can look like something happened overnight. But in reality, it was built in the hidden places. In the quiet decisions. In the moments where no one was watching. In the seasons where nothing seemed to be happening at all.

That is exactly what we see in Genesis 41.

Joseph’s promotion was sudden, but his preparation was not.

So today, if you are in a season that feels slow, do not discount it. If it feels like nothing is moving, do not assume nothing is happening. God is building something in you that will matter when the moment comes.

And when it does, you will be ready.

Because God does not waste the waiting.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You are always working, even in the seasons we do not fully understand. Help us to stay faithful in the small things and trust that You are preparing us for what You have ahead. And when the moment comes, give us the humility to point everything back to You. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

Faithful in the Waiting

Genesis 40:23 (ESV)
“Yet the chief cupbearer did not remember Joseph, but forgot him.”

Genesis 40 finds Joseph in prison. Not because he did something wrong, but because he did what was right. He chose integrity, and now he is sitting in a place that feels far removed from the dream God gave him. And yet, even here, one thing remains consistent. “The Lord was with Joseph.”

Joseph is still faithful.

He is not withdrawn or bitter. He continues to serve. When the cupbearer and the baker have troubling dreams, Joseph steps in. He listens, he cares, and he points them back to God. Even in prison, Joseph is still living with purpose.

But then comes the moment that feels like it could change everything. He interprets the cupbearer’s dream correctly, and before the man leaves, Joseph asks him to remember him. It feels like the door is about to open.

And then the chapter ends with a hard reality.

“He did not remember Joseph, but forgot him.”

That feeling is real.

I remember a season in my own life where, behind the scenes, I had a significant amount of influence on what was happening in an organization I was part of. I was fully invested, working hard, and doing everything I could to serve well. But when the time came for things to be recognized publicly, the credit was given to others instead of me.

That moment could have easily led to frustration.

But I knew what my responsibility was. My responsibility was not to receive credit. It was to be faithful. To do the work well, regardless of who was seen or recognized.

And that lesson has stuck with me.

Because too often in our culture, we become focused on the appearance of doing good rather than the ethic of doing good. We want to be seen, acknowledged, and affirmed. But Scripture calls us to something deeper. Faithfulness, even when it is unseen.

That is exactly what Joseph models.

He was forgotten by people, but he was not forgotten by God.

And the same is true for us.

So today, if you find yourself in a season where your faithfulness feels unnoticed, where your work feels overlooked, do not lose heart. Stay faithful. Keep serving. Keep honoring God in what He has placed in front of you.

Because the goal is not recognition.

The goal is faithfulness.

And God sees what others miss.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You see every act of faithfulness, even when it goes unnoticed by others. Help us to focus on honoring You rather than seeking recognition. Strengthen us to stay faithful in every season, trusting that You are always working. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Michael Yardley Michael Yardley

Faithful When No One Is Watching

Genesis 39:2 (ESV)
“The Lord was with Joseph, and he became a successful man, and he was in the house of his Egyptian master.”

Genesis 39 picks up Joseph’s story after the pit. He has been sold into slavery, taken to Egypt, and placed in a situation he did not choose. And yet, one phrase stands out over and over again in this chapter. “The Lord was with Joseph.” That is important, because Joseph’s circumstances do not look like success. He is not where he dreamed he would be. He is not in a position of influence. He is a servant in someone else’s house. But God’s presence has not left him.

And because of that, Joseph chooses to be faithful.

He works with excellence. He earns trust. He carries responsibility with integrity. Even in a place that feels far from the promise, he honors God in how he lives. And then the pressure increases. Joseph is tempted repeatedly in a situation where it would have been easy to compromise. No one would have known. No one would have seen. But Joseph refuses. He chooses integrity over convenience, obedience over opportunity. And it costs him. He is falsely accused and thrown into prison.

That is where this hits home for us.

I think the reality is that every single one of us has opportunities to compromise every day. To take a shortcut. To bend the truth. The question is not whether the opportunity is there. The question is whether we choose what is right regardless of the outcome.

I even think back to when I was in school, and yes, this will date me a little bit, but one of my classmates was asked if he was the one who colored on the chalkboard. He admitted that he was. And the teacher gave him a lollipop for telling the truth. I remember watching that and thinking, okay, that’s how this works.

Not long after that, I had a moment where I had the opportunity to tell the truth, and I did. But if I’m being honest, I told the truth because I thought I was going to get a lollipop too.

I didn’t.

And I remember being pretty disappointed.

But looking back on it now, that moment taught me something that has stuck with me ever since. We don’t tell the truth to get something out of it. We tell the truth because it’s the right thing to do.

That is exactly what we see in Joseph’s life. He didn’t choose integrity because it would benefit him. In fact, it made his situation harder. But he chose it anyway.

And that is the kind of faith God calls us to.

So today, when you are faced with a moment where it would be easy to compromise, remember this. You don’t do what is right because of what it might bring you. You do what is right because it honors God.

Even when no one is watching.
Even when it costs you.
Even when there is no lollipop on the other side.

Because the Lord is with you.

Prayer
Lord, thank You that You are with us in every circumstance. Give us the strength to walk in integrity, even in the small, unseen moments. Help us to choose what is right simply because it honors You. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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