At the beginning of each day, you step into the world and, if you’re lucky, you avoid the news and the bickering and the sensational soundbites.
You step across the remains of yesterday with a mug of comfort in your hands and you avoid that one floorboard that creaks when the weather slides just the slightest bit sideways. When you stand barefoot in front of the window or on the deck or on your front porch or patio or in the grass, it is only the dog or the cat or the robin looking for worms that shifts its gaze in greeting — thumping tail, arched back, or head tilted toward the earth.
So, you breathe, and let the morning fill your lungs with its dewy sweetness.
“Take heart,” the silence might breathe back to you. “All is well.”
All is well.
You might question that, as you exhale. Because, even though you’ve avoided the news and the bickering and the sensational soundbites in these first few moments, their residue hangs loosely at the edges of the day. The weight of the world. The depth of the sorrow. The disappointment of unexpected turns in the road.
Don’t lose heart. All is well. You are in good company.
The Bible goes to great lengths to show us that all the people on its pages were ordinary and average, doing one little thing after another, rooted in trust, grounded in good news, and drenched in fear or hopelessness.
We take the good with the bad, and God is gracious to give us both, as a reminder that every good and perfect thing starts with God. (See James 1:17)
Even people like Moses and Noah and Abraham and Sarah had their weaknesses and made their missteps. When Paul talks about the prophet Elijah, and how Elijah prayed to God for it to rain and God heard Elijah’s prayer, Paul points out for all to see, “Elijah was a human being, even as we are.” (James 5:17)
The only one who rose above it all was Jesus.
As for the rest of the people in all the stories of the Bible, God filled them up with His Holy Spirit and breathed life into their dreams and their plans, and God, through ordinary people who did ordinary things, made miracles happen that changed the world for good.
Take heart, sister girl. All is well. Breathe deeply. Do your part. Do your one thing. Fight the good fight. Offer grace. Work for justice. Move with mercy.
Be kind.
Keep your focus. Keep moving forward. Keep looking up.
Keep offering up every little thing in your ordinary life to the God of good things and miracles and hope.
Take heart, sister girl. All is well.
This post is also at incourage.me. Join us over there for the conversation.
Melissa Henderson
Amen. With God, all is well. 🙂
lindalouise
So needed today, Deidra. Thank you for your beautiful, encouraging words.
Marian Vischer
A good word this sister girl sure needed today. Thank you!
Becky L
these words touch my heart today. I just came over to see what you’ve written lately as I’ve been so busy. There’s goodness amongst the sadness of our days we walk through. My daughter is still looking for work and we are earnestly praying for something to open up soon. We know it’s all in God’s timing. Megan still wonders what’s wrong with her resume that’s been gone over a couple times and changed. Why is everything done over the internet, no interviews. How can they say no when they don’t really know her? But she steps bravely into another day. Picking a short term job of picking currants while she waits. I pray and step through the days at work and help people through their day while I work at the register. People smiling, sometimes we tell jokes, tell stories if we have time. It’s all good, sister girl, Deidra!