![]() Instead, “cast your burden upon the LORD and He will sustain you” (Ps. Don’t let panic set in as you sit beside the drying brook. Ask Him for clarity on why He’s allowed this deficiency, then wait for wisdom and direction. Whether it’s the money required to support our current venture, the emotional reserves required to invest in a friendship, or the physical energy required to continue the pace of life we’ve known until now-when these resources start to diminish, look to God. In this reality, we find our first lesson: sometimes we can discern that God is preparing to unsettle us when the resources needed to sustain us in our current position start to shrivel and dry up. Very likely, given his commitment to a lifestyle of fervent prayer-as we saw in James 5-he was consistently discussing his predicament with God-seeking clarity, wisdom, and supply. As each scorching, rainless day bled into the next, he knew his chances of survival in that secluded spot were going down, until finally the drought had baked his little creek bed into a bone-dry ribbon of dust. He watched the brook of Cherith slowly dry up before his eyes (1 Kings 17:7). We must identify times of divine unsettling so we can release our grasp on one season and willingly move forward to the next, keeping our eyes, ears, and hearts open to receive everything God intends for us there.Įlijah wasn’t blind. ![]() Here’s the clear yet difficult task for all of us who want to grow with God, glean the lessons He wants to teach, and move toward fulfilling our unique, divinely mandated purpose. Because if we’re never “poured from one container to another,” as Jeremiah 48:11 says, we stay unchanged. He does it to make us better prepared for the Mount Carmels yet to come. He does it with our best interests in mind. Then He does it again, and again-from a heart of love-for as long as we have breath in our lungs. Either way, He strategically pours us into a new place and space-with new people, with new circumstances, with new life dynamics-knowing this new environment will be the most suitable for whatever He wants to reshape in us next. Then at the right time, when the work that needs to happen there is done, He unsettles us-sometimes in a way that feels forcible, sudden, and painful other times in a nearly undetectable way that is organic, seamless, and can only be pinpointed in hindsight. He deposits us into one season, with its own unique set of joys, challenges, people, and problems, and He lets us sit there a while. It’s a necessary part of His process.Įach phase represents another refining stage in a divine progression of life. In His wise and sovereign way, He often includes seasons of unsettledness where He transfers us out of the comfort and complacency of familiarity and moves us into a new place and position. ![]() Order your copy or see a free sample today at /Elijah.Ĭomfort and steadiness is what we crave, but overstaying our welcome in one place can rob us of the work God intends to do in us at the next one. ![]() Today we’re sharing an excerpt from Priscilla Shirer’s new study, Elijah. ![]()
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