Living in the Land of God’s Yes

Standing on Solid Ground

A Day in the Life

This morning, I found myself returning to a passage that never fails to anchor my soul: “For all the promises of God in Him are Yes, and in Him Amen, to the glory of God through us” (2 Corinthians 1:20). There’s something beautifully settled about this verse, something that cuts through the uncertainty and hesitation we often feel about God’s commitment to us. In a world where promises are frequently broken and commitments casually abandoned, God stands as the ultimate Promise Keeper.

I’ve been thinking about what it means to really believe that God keeps every promise He makes. Not just intellectually affirm it, but to live as though it’s true—to let that truth shape how I pray, how I wait, how I hope. When we walk in intimate fellowship with Christ, we have the remarkable assurance that every promise God has made in Scripture is genuinely available to us. Not theoretically available. Not available with asterisks and fine print. Actually, truly available.

This reality should change how we approach Scripture. Instead of reading the Bible as a collection of nice sentiments or historical accounts, we should search its pages with the eager anticipation of treasure hunters. Each promise is a potential waiting to be unlocked in our lives. As Charles Spurgeon once said, “The promises of God are certain, but they do not all mature in ninety days.” That timeline piece is crucial, and we’ll return to it shortly.

Let me share something personal. I’ve wrestled with one promise in particular for years: Jesus’ words in John 16:23—”Most assuredly, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in My name He will give you.” I used to read that and feel confused, even a bit skeptical. I’d asked for things in Jesus’ name that didn’t materialize the way I expected. Was the promise not true? Had I misunderstood? Was there something deficient in my faith?

But here’s what I’ve learned through that wrestling: this promise is absolutely available to every Christian. If I were to ask God directly whether this promise applies to my life, His answer would be an unequivocal yes. The fact that I haven’t always experienced the fulfillment of this promise in the timing or manner I anticipated doesn’t change the fundamental truth that God has spoken it. What it means is that I may need to seek God’s wisdom about why His promise hasn’t yet reached full maturity in my particular situation.

Perhaps the request wasn’t truly aligned with His will. Perhaps the timing wasn’t right. Perhaps God was doing preparatory work in my heart that needed to happen first. Or perhaps the answer was coming in a form I didn’t recognize because I was too focused on my preferred outcome. A.W. Tozer wisely observed, “God is not silent. It is the nature of God to speak. The Bible is the inevitable outcome of God’s continuous speech.” God’s speech includes His promises, and His silence when we’re waiting isn’t really silence at all—it’s the purposeful pause of a Father who knows exactly what He’s doing.

The apostle Paul stands as a powerful testimony to the reliability of God’s promises. He claimed that he had personally tested each of these promises in his own life and found them all to be abundantly true. Think about the weight of that statement. This is Paul—the man who was shipwrecked, beaten, imprisoned, stoned and left for dead, hungry, cold, and constantly in danger. Yet he could still write about “the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus” (Ephesians 2:7) and “the unsearchable riches of Christ” (Ephesians 3:8).

Paul had discovered something that many of us are still learning: God’s promises aren’t negated by difficult circumstances. In fact, it’s often in the crucible of hardship that we discover the wealth of God’s promises most vividly. Paul had found a treasure trove of divine commitments and enjoyed them all in abundance—not because his life was easy, but because his life was hidden in Christ.

I want to speak directly to anyone reading this who feels discouraged because you’re not experiencing the fullness of God’s promises in your life right now. Please don’t lose heart. Don’t let impatience rob you of what God is preparing to give you. God may want to prepare you to receive some of the great truths He has made available to you. Think of it this way: you wouldn’t hand a two-year-old the keys to your car and tell them to drive. Not because you don’t love them or because you’re withholding something good from them, but because they need to grow into the readiness to receive that responsibility.

Some of God’s promises work the same way. He’s not withholding them arbitrarily; He’s preparing us to steward them wisely, to appreciate them fully, to use them for His glory rather than our ego. The delay isn’t denial—it’s development.

Walking closely with our Lord is the key. As we maintain that intimate fellowship, staying near to His heart through prayer, Scripture, worship, and obedience, we position ourselves to see Him bring His promises to fruition in our life. The promises don’t change based on our proximity to God, but our capacity to recognize and receive them certainly does.

Here’s what I’m learning: God’s “yes” in Christ isn’t tentative or conditional in the sense that it depends on our perfection. It’s a settled yes, secured by Jesus’ finished work. But the manifestation of that yes in our lived experience often unfolds progressively as we grow in faith, maturity, and alignment with God’s will. The promise is already yes. The “amen”—the “so be it”—comes to the glory of God through us as we live in responsive faith.

So today, I’m choosing to stand on this solid ground: God’s promises are yes. Not maybe. Not possibly. Not if I perform well enough. Yes. In Christ, every divine promise finds its affirmation. And that changes everything about how I approach this day.

For further exploration of standing firm on God’s promises, I recommend this encouraging article from Desiring God: The Promises of God

FEEL FREE TO COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE, AND REPOST, SO OTHERS MAY KNOW

 

#2Corinthians120 #biblicalPromises #GodSPromises #prayerAndFaith #spiritualMaturity #trustingGodSTiming #waitingOnGod