March 13, 2026
Daily Devotional

Daily Devotional

"And Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until the breaking of the day… So Jacob called the name of the place Peniel, saying, “For I have seen God face to face, and yet my life has been delivered."

Genesis 32:24, 30

Jacob walked away from his encounter with God with a limp. He had wrestled through the night and prevailed in the sense that he received the blessing he sought, but he did not emerge unscathed. The socket of his hip was put out of joint. He would carry the mark of that encounter for the rest of his life. And that, the sermon suggested, is not incidental. The limp was not a punishment. It was a reminder.

The sermon offered a direct and uncomfortable word: our comfort level is not our God meter. God does not grow small because circumstances grow hard. He does not become less faithful because our expectations go unmet. The Israelites had made the mistake of measuring God’s love by whether life was going smoothly, and when it was not, God had become, in their reckoning, distant and small.

Scripture tells a very different story. Jacob was refined through struggle. Joseph was refined through betrayal and imprisonment. Moses was refined through 40 years in the wilderness. Paul learned contentment through chains. The consistent testimony of the biblical narrative is that God does his deepest work not in the seasons of comfort but in the seasons of stripping. He removes what can be removed so that what remains is unmistakably him.

The pastor testified personally: He is going to keep bursting your bubbles until you realize it. I promise. I can testify to this. God strips away the things that fail us so he can prove that he will not fail us. He allows the limp so we stop trusting our own strength and start trusting his. The discomfort is not the absence of his love. In many cases, it is the most concentrated expression of it.

Today's Challenge

Where has God allowed something to be stripped away in your life, not as punishment, but as refinement? Looking back, what did that stripping reveal about where you had been placing your trust? Is there something you are clinging to right now that God may be inviting you to hold more loosely?

Prayer

Father, I confess that I have confused comfort with blessing and hardship with abandonment. Teach me to see your hand in the stripping, not just in the giving. Help me to hold loosely the things that can be taken so that I can hold tightly to the only thing that cannot: your unbreakable covenant love for me in Christ. Where I am limping right now, let the limp be a reminder that my strength is found in you. In Jesus’ name, Amen.