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Sunday, 28 June 2026

The Hands That See Further

One of the quiet frustrations of being human is how little we actually see.

We judge moments while standing inside them. We measure seasons before they have finished unfolding. We label situations as victories or failures long before their stories have reached the final chapter.

God does not have that limitation.

Where we see a closed door, He sees the corridor beyond it. Where we see delay, He sees preparation. Where we see loss, He sometimes sees the only path that could have carried us into what comes next.

That is why trust is never an invitation to ignore reality. It is an invitation to admit that our reality is incomplete.

Looking back over my own journey, some of the experiences I fought the hardest against became the very things that dismantled barriers I had carried for years. They did not feel like blessings while I was living through them. They felt inconvenient. Sometimes painful. Occasionally unfair.

Yet time has a remarkable way of revealing what emotion could not.

Perhaps that difficult season was not standing in the way. Perhaps it was clearing the way.

We exhaust ourselves trying to force doors open, repeatedly running into walls that were never ours to break. Meanwhile, the God who sees beyond every wall has already prepared a path we cannot yet recognise.

There is a strange comfort in that.

Not because life suddenly becomes easy, but because we realise we are held by Someone whose vision stretches far beyond our own. There are moments when answers are absent, explanations are delayed, and certainty refuses to arrive. Yet even then, there remains the quiet assurance of God's presence. His arms around us become enough. The warmth of His faithfulness steadies the heart long before circumstances begin to change.

Trust grows there.

Not in knowing everything.

But in knowing Him.

Paul reminds us in Ephesians 2:10 that "we are His workmanship." We are not self-made lives wandering through random events. We are being shaped by deliberate hands. Every cut, every polish, every season has purpose because the Craftsman has not abandoned His work.

The masterpiece rarely understands the chisel.

The clay seldom appreciates the pressure.

Yet neither is being harmed by the hands that formed them.

Perhaps today is not asking for another strategy. Perhaps it is asking for surrender.

To stop bruising ourselves against walls that God never intended us to climb.

To believe that help is not merely available but already surrounding us.

To trust that the God who sees beyond us also walks before us.

And if He is faithful enough to begin His work, He is certainly faithful enough to finish it.

Nugget

Faith is not confidence that tomorrow will follow my plan. It is quiet rest in the certainty that the One writing tomorrow can already see beyond the horizon I have not yet reached.

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