Every Little Bit Matters
Barb Roose
Today’s Truth
So let’s not get tired of doing what is good. At just the right time we will reap a harvest of blessing if we don’t give up (Galatians 6:9 NLT).
Friend to Friend
“Daddy, why do you do that every day?”
After working his 12-hour shift, one of my dad’s first stops after work was to drop his spare pocket change into a large cardboard Tootsie Roll bank on his dresser. As a little kid, it was one of my favorite moments each day. Sometimes, he’d let me drop a few coins through the slot and he’d smile as the metal coins clinked together. Periodically, he’d remind me why he made that coin drop each day: “I’m saving for summertime, sweetheart.”
We only went on a few family vacations during my childhood, but my parents always made sure that we’d visit the large amusement park near our home once or twice a summer. Shortly before each trip, Mom or Dad would take their Tootsie Roll tubes to the bank and convert that spare change into cash for park tickets, food and spending money.
As a kid, I saw only a few coins going into the savings bank each day, but my parents never lost sight of how a little multiplied over time can accumulate into something meaningful. Time and time again, their inconsequential spare change funded opportunities to create enduring family memories in a way that our family budget couldn’t easily afford.
Today’s Truth is both an attitude check and encouragement, if you’ve wondered whether or not it matters if you pray or read your Bible on any given day. Or, maybe you’re fighting discouragement because you feel like you’re the only believer in your family or at your job. As one who also experienced discouragement and frustration, the Apostle Paul knew that walking out our daily discipleship would feel fruitless at times and we’d wonder if single acts of daily discipleship are worth it.
The sowing and reaping that Paul writes about Galatians 6 looks a lot like my dad’s act of dropping change into that Tootsie Roll bank. Paul uses sowing and reaping as an illustration to describe our investment in the sanctification process, also known as our cooperation with the Holy Spirit’s work in us.
There’s something supernatural and mysterious about sowing and reaping. When a seed is planted in the ground and cared for, it multiples over time. One seed can yield an exponential number or size. While the day-to-day care of a garden or field can grow tiresome, a planter never loses sight of the payoff, which provides the motivation to do the small needed actions like providing food, water and adequate sunlight. Paul encourages us to never tire of doing good because the Holy Spirit will supernaturally and exponentially do in us what we can’t do for ourselves, which is life transformation. God’s big vision for us is a total change of our heart, mind and lives. That’s a supernatural yield far beyond what we can grow on our own. We don’t have to produce the supernatural growth, God will.
If you’ve been discouraged in where you’re at spiritually, take heart in knowing that God is at work in your life, even if you can’t see it. Grab God’s vision as your own and see yourself in the care of His sovereign hands. He knows how to demolish your spiritual strongholds, reshape your self-centered heart or heal your hidden wounds. You show up by willingly and intentionally offering yourself to God, shortcomings and all. In return, Today’s Truth reminds you that the harvest of blessing will come in your life and God will receive glory for it all!
How has Paul’s words in Today’s Truth ministered to your heart today?
Let’s Pray
God, I believe that You are at work in my life, even when I can’t see it and even when I wonder if praying or other acts of discipleship matter. Remind me today of how You’ve transformed my life and open my eyes to any “harvest of blessing” that has come as a result of Your Spirit’s transforming power. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.