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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

What is the significance of acknowledging God’s Providence and Sovereignty in daily life, according to Christian beliefs?

When I acknowledge God’s sovereignty in my daily life, I’m not just agreeing with a theological statement; I’m bowing my heart to the reality that God is God, and I am not. Sovereignty means He rules. Providence means He personally governs what He rules with purpose, wisdom, and care. Those two truths belong together in Scripture: God “does according to His will” and no one can restrain His hand (Dan 4:34–35), and yet that same God knows what we need, feeds the birds, clothes the lilies, and even numbers the hairs on our head (Matt 6:25–34; Matt 10:29–31). So when I acknowledge His sovereignty, I’m also learning to trust His providence, His active, fatherly involvement in the ordinary and painful details of my life. 

This changes the way I live on a Monday morning, not just the way I talk in church. Proverbs tells me, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths” (Prov 3:5–6). That verse forces me to admit something I don’t like admitting: my understanding is limited, my instincts can be wrong, and my plans don’t control outcomes. I can plan my way, but “the Lord directs his steps” (Prov 16:9). Even my timing is not ultimately mine, “My times are in Your hand” (Ps 31:15). When I truly acknowledge God’s sovereignty, I stop living like I’m carrying the whole universe on my back, and I start living like God is actually directing my path. 

That’s why Jesus goes straight to worry. He doesn’t pretend daily needs aren’t real. He tells me not to be consumed by them because my Father knows what I need, and my Father provides, so I’m called to seek His kingdom and righteousness and trust Him with the rest (Matt 6:25–34). That’s providence. It’s not vague optimism. It’s the conviction that God is near, God is aware, God is active, and God is not careless with my life. “Not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father’s will” (Matt 10:29–31). If God’s rule reaches even there, then my life is not random, and my pain is not outside His notice. 

Acknowledging sovereignty also confronts my pride and my illusion of control. James warns me about making confident plans as if tomorrow belongs to me: “Whereas you do not know what will happen tomorrow… Instead you ought to say, ‘If the Lord wills, we shall live and do this or that’” (James 4:13–15). That isn’t fatalism. It’s humility. It’s the daily confession that my next breath is a gift because God “gives to all life, breath, and all things” (Acts 17:24–28). It keeps me from living as if my power made my life work. Scripture says I’m not even allowed to boast in what I have, because “what do you have that you did not receive?” (1 Cor 4:7). Even the strength to earn is from Him (Deut 8:17–18). When I acknowledge His sovereignty, I stop pretending I’m self-made, and I start giving thanks like a person who knows he’s been carried. 

This is also why acknowledging sovereignty steadies me in suffering. I won’t lie, there are days when I don’t understand what God is doing. Yet Scripture doesn’t ask me to pretend life is easy; it asks me to trust the God who is wise. It tells me that “all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose” (Rom 8:28). It shows me Joseph’s perspective: people meant evil, “but God meant it for good” (Gen 50:20). That’s providence operating inside sovereignty, God ruling even when humans sin, without God being the author of their sin, and still accomplishing His purpose. When I acknowledge sovereignty, I don’t have to call evil “good,” but I can stop calling my life “meaningless.” I can commit my soul to Him “as to a faithful Creator” while I keep doing good (1 Pet 4:19). I can say with Job, “The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord” (Job 1:21), not because loss feels good, but because God is still God. 

Acknowledging sovereignty also reshapes my inner world, my anxiety, my thought-life, and my emotional reactions. When Paul says, “Be anxious for nothing,” he doesn’t mean I never feel anxious; he means I don’t have to live there. He tells me what to do with anxiety: take it to God in prayer with thanksgiving, and God’s peace will guard my heart and mind (Phil 4:6–7). That peace is providential protection in the middle of trouble, not the absence of trouble. Isaiah ties it together: God keeps in perfect peace the one whose mind is stayed on Him because he trusts Him (Isa 26:3–4). The practice of acknowledging God’s sovereignty becomes a daily exchange, my worry for His peace, my control for His care, my panic for His promises. 

It also changes my work. If God is sovereign, my labor is not ultimate. “Unless the Lord builds the house, they labor in vain who build it” (Ps 127:1). That humbles me, but it also frees me. I can “commit [my] way to the Lord” and trust that “He shall bring it to pass” (Ps 37:5). I can commit my works to Him and ask Him to establish my thoughts (Prov 16:3). I can do what I do “in word or deed… in the name of the Lord Jesus,” giving thanks to the Father (Col 3:17). And I can remember I’m not the vine, I’m a branch. Jesus said, “Without Me you can do nothing” (John 15:5). That is sovereignty and providence in daily practice: God rules, God supplies, and I live dependently, not defiantly. 

So the significance of acknowledging God’s sovereignty in daily life is that it puts me back in reality. God is King, His throne is established, and “His kingdom rules over all” (Ps 103:19). He “does whatever He pleases” (Ps 115:3), His counsel stands (Ps 33:10–11; Prov 19:21; Isa 46:9–10), and no purpose of His can be withheld (Job 42:2). Yet this sovereign God is not distant. He provides food in due season (Ps 145:15–16), opens His hand (Ps 104:27–28), and cares enough to tell me to cast my cares on Him because He cares for me (1 Pet 5:6–7). When I acknowledge His sovereignty, I stop living like an orphan fighting for control, and I start living like a child who can trust his Father’s rule and rest in his Father’s providence. 

Monday, April 6, 2026

Should your partner know everything about your past, or only what affects them now?

When someone asks, “Should your partner know everything about your past, or only what affects them now?” I understand why people split into two schools of thought, because we all carry things we’re not proud of, and we all want to be loved without being defined by our worst moments. Some people say, “My history is my history, and it’s no one else’s business.” The logic sounds clean: the past stays in the past, and what happened back then shouldn’t be used against me now. I get that instinct, especially when the past includes shame, embarrassment, or failures we’d rather never revisit. 

But when I read Scripture and think about how marriage actually works in real life, I don’t believe “my past is none of your business” is a safe foundation for a covenant relationship. Marriage is not just romance; it is trust. It is a covenant. It is two people becoming one flesh (Gen 2:24–25). And it is hard to become “one” with someone while I’m holding back essential parts of my story that will shape how I live, how I react, what I fear, what I desire, and what I may be tempted to return to. 

This is where I try to be careful and personally pastoral, because honesty is not the same thing as dumping every detail. Scripture doesn’t command me to be reckless or graphic. It does command me to be truthful. “Therefore, putting away lying, ‘Let each one of you speak truth with his neighbor,’ for we are members of one another” (Eph 4:25). “Do not lie to one another” (Col 3:9). Those words matter because lies and half-truths poison trust. God doesn’t treat deception lightly. “Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord, but those who deal truthfully are His delight” (Prov 12:22). If I want a marriage where trust can breathe, then truth has to be normal in our home, not occasional. 

So when I think about the question, I come back to a simple principle: my partner should know what is necessary to make an honest, informed, and loving covenant with me, and what could reasonably affect our marriage, our intimacy, our parenting, our finances, our future plans, and our spiritual health. That’s not “everything” in the sense of every detail. It is everything in terms of honesty about the parts of my past that will walk into this marriage with us. 

Let me put it in plain examples, because this is where people get hurt. If I have a history of addiction, and I hide it, I am not just hiding information; I am hiding a danger point. Temptation doesn’t politely stay in the past because I want it to. And if alcohol once made me reckless or violent or out of control, my future spouse needs to know that, because she may assume “social drinking” is harmless, while I know it could be the doorway back into bondage. Scripture doesn’t just warn us about sexual sin; it also warns us about taking advantage of people and defrauding them, hurting someone through deception in matters that affect them deeply (1 Thess 4:3–7). Hiding a serious vulnerability like that can become a form of defrauding, because I’m asking someone to bind their life to mine without the truth. 

Or take the example of an abortion in the past, something many people carry with heavy shame and grief. If that abortion resulted in the inability to have children, and my future spouse deeply desires children, that is not a small detail. That’s not a private preference. That affects our life together. It’s not fair to marry someone who believes one future is possible when, in reality, it may not be. And even if adoption is an option, my spouse deserves to enter the covenant with eyes open, not with a hidden landmine that explodes after vows. 

This is why I lean so strongly toward transparency during courtship. Not because I want people to live in fear, but because I want marriages built on truth rather than on the illusion of truth. Luke says, “For nothing is secret that will not be revealed, nor anything hidden that will not be known and come to light” (Luke 8:17). I have watched hidden things surface later. When they do, it often isn’t just the past that hurts; it’s the betrayal of being kept in the dark. 

At the same time, I want to be clear: transparency is not the same as having no boundaries. A person can be honest without sharing every image, every detail, every graphic memory. Honesty means I tell the truth about reality. It means I don’t create a false version of myself to secure love. It means I don’t lie by omission when the omission changes what my partner is consenting to. Integrity matters here. “The integrity of the upright will guide them, but the perversity of the unfaithful will destroy them” (Prov 11:3). “He who walks with integrity walks securely” (Prov 10:9). When I live in integrity, I don’t have to live in fear of exposure. 

When people ask, “Shouldn’t the past stay in the past?” I understand the desire. But Scripture shows me that covering sin does not lead to flourishing: “He who covers his sins will not prosper, but whoever confesses and forsakes them will have mercy” (Prov 28:13). That does not mean I confess every sin to my spouse as if she is my priest. Ultimately, my confession is to God, who forgives and cleanses (1 John 1:9; Ps 32:5). But it does mean that a lifestyle of hiding is spiritually dangerous, relationally corrosive, and often becomes the seedbed of future distrust. 

Marriage also has a particular calling in Scripture, love without hypocrisy and love that rejoices in truth. “Let love be without hypocrisy” (Rom 12:9). “Love… does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth” (1 Cor 13:4–7). That means real love does not need deception to survive. Real love can handle truth because it is anchored in grace, patience, and endurance. 

And since marriage is meant to be intimate in every sense, spiritually, emotionally, and physically, Scripture even describes the original marriage as openness without shame: “And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed” (Gen 2:24–25). That doesn’t mean we have no privacy. It means the covenant is designed for safe openness, not secret double-lives. 

I also think about what Scripture requires of husbands and wives. Husbands are called to love with sacrificial care and to nourish and cherish their wives (Eph 5:25–33). Husbands are called to dwell with their wives with understanding and honor (1 Pet 3:7). Those commands require knowing the real person, not a curated résumé. A husband cannot “dwell with understanding” if his wife has hidden the very wounds that shape her fears. A wife cannot respect and trust her husband if she later discovers his “story” was built on concealment. 

So here is where I land it, as simply and lovingly as I can: I don’t believe a partner needs every unnecessary detail of my past, but I do believe my partner needs the truth about my past where it affects who I am, what I carry, what I’m tempted by, what I’m recovering from, what I’m capable of, and what kind of future I’m actually bringing into the relationship. That is not only wise but also biblical. It is also freeing. Jesus said, “And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:32). 

A healthy relationship is not built on “how little can I disclose and still keep you.” It’s built on mercy and truth that don’t forsake us (Prov 3:3–4). It’s built on a kind of honesty that protects trust, strengthens unity, and keeps us from the slow poison of secrets. If I want a marriage that lasts, I can’t build it the way people build casual relationships, by hiding the parts of me that might cost me something. Courtship is the time to bring the real story into the light with wisdom, humility, and love, so that the covenant begins with truth rather than with a false belief about who we are marrying.  

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

What does true spiritual growth look like in a Christian’s life?

True spiritual growth, in a Christian’s life, looks like real change over time, change in what I love, what I pursue, how I think, how I respond, and what I value. Scripture tells me to “grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ” (2 Pet 3:18), and that growth is not just information; it is transformation. It is what happens when I keep receiving Christ and then actually walk in Him, “rooted and built up in Him and established in the faith” (Col 2:6–7). In simple terms, spiritual growth looks like someone who no longer acts or behaves as they once did, because Christ is shaping them from the inside out (2 Cor 3:18). 

One of the clearest pictures of that growth is maturity. Paul explains it plainly: “When I was a child, I spoke as a child… but when I became a man, I put away childish things” (1 Cor 13:11). Hebrews expands that same idea and shows me what immaturity looks like: being stuck at the basics, needing “milk and not solid food,” staying “unskilled in the word of righteousness,” and never developing discernment (Heb 5:12–14). But maturity looks different: “solid food belongs to those who are of full age… who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil” (Heb 5:14). So true growth is not me staying the same while claiming faith, it is me learning the Word, using it, and becoming more discerning and steady over time (1 Pet 2:2–3; 1 Tim 4:15). 

For me, the evidence of growth is that I can look back and honestly say I am not the same man I used to be. I used to pursue what the world offers as if it could satisfy my soul, what Scripture calls “the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life” (1 John 2:15–17). I chased the “works of the flesh,” thinking they would fill the empty places in me, but I learned the hard way that the flesh never truly satisfies; it only keeps demanding more. Coming to faith in Christ opened my eyes to how temporary those pursuits are, and how they can quietly dominate us. That is part of what Scripture means when it says not to be “conformed to this world, but… transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Rom 12:2). My mind started changing, and over time, my appetites started changing too. 

Today, I sit here writing this response not because I have to, as if it were some cold obligation, but because I want to live a life that makes sense in light of what Christ has done for me. I do feel a responsibility to speak truth and point people to God’s Word, but the deeper motivation is gratitude and love. I believe God is still working in me: “He who has begun a good work… will complete it” (Phil 1:6). I also know that any increase I have is not because I am impressive; “God gave the increase” (1 Cor 3:6–7). That keeps me grounded. True growth is not self-worship; it is dependence, abiding in Christ like a branch in the vine, because “without Me you can do nothing” (John 15:1–5). 

True spiritual growth also shows up in fruit, not just talk. If the Holy Spirit is truly at work in me, He will produce what I cannot consistently produce on my own: “love, joy, peace… kindness… self-control” (Gal 5:22–23). That fruit does not appear overnight, and I still stumble at times, but the direction of my life changes. I increasingly want to please the Lord, not myself. I increasingly want truth, not excuses. I increasingly want to “speak the truth in love” and “grow up in all things into Him… Christ” (Eph 4:15). I increasingly want to put off the old patterns and put on the new life, “put off… the old man… be renewed… and… put on the new man” (Eph 4:22–24; Col 3:9–10). That is not perfection in a moment; it is progress in a direction. 

Finally, true spiritual growth looks like living with eternity in view. I still live in this world, but I do not want the world to rule me. My heart is learning to live for what lasts, not what flashes. I press forward, like Paul described: “forgetting those things which are behind… I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Phil 3:13–14). The more I grow, the more I see that living for myself is a miserable cycle of chasing what never satisfies. But living by the Spirit produces steadiness, endurance, and hope (Rom 5:3–5; James 1:2–4). So, when I ask what true spiritual growth looks like in my life, I would say this: it is the Lord changing my will, renewing my mind, producing His fruit in me, and teaching me to live today with the end in mind, so that my life is not about what I can gain right now, but about faithfully walking with Christ and helping others see Him too.