When the Small Things Matter to a Near God

As the Day Begins

“The Lord is near to all who call upon Him.” (Psalm 145:18)

The question “Does God care?” often rises quietly from the ordinary places of life rather than from moments of crisis alone. It surfaces when bills are stacked on the counter, when the car sputters and the air-conditioning gives out in the heat, when a careless word spoken in a family argument lingers longer than it should. Psalm 145:18 does not answer that question with abstraction or philosophy; it answers it with nearness. The Hebrew word qarov carries the sense of being close at hand, within reach, attentive rather than distant. The psalmist is not claiming that God occasionally checks in on the faithful, but that God positions Himself near—present, aware, and responsive—to those who call upon Him in truth. This verse invites us to reconsider the scale of God’s concern. If the Lord is near, then nothing we bring into His presence is too small to matter.

Many believers quietly assume that God is primarily concerned with spiritual matters and only marginally interested in practical ones. Yet Scripture consistently resists that separation. Jesus speaks of sparrows, daily bread, and anxious hearts as matters worthy of prayer. The God who governs galaxies also notices tears shed behind closed doors. When we ask whether God cares about debt, broken appliances, or strained family relationships, we are really asking whether His nearness extends into the mundane. Psalm 145 suggests that it does. God’s care is not selective, offered only when life reaches a certain threshold of seriousness. He is involved in every moment of our lives, not because we demand His attention, but because His nature is faithful and relational. As theologian Walter Brueggemann has observed, the Psalms portray a God who “leans toward His people,” listening closely to the texture of their lived experience.

As this day begins, the invitation is not to minimize your concerns but to bring them honestly before a God who is already near. Calling upon the Lord is less about perfect words and more about truthful presence. The psalm adds that God is near to those who call on Him “in truth,” a reminder that authenticity matters more than polish. Whether your prayer today is confident or faltering, hopeful or weary, God meets you there. Like a parent who bends down to hear a child’s quiet voice, the Lord inclines Himself toward those who seek Him. This awareness reshapes the day ahead. If God cares about the small things, then no part of today is spiritually insignificant. Each interaction, frustration, and decision becomes a place where divine nearness can be recognized and trusted.

 

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father,
I begin this day acknowledging Your nearness and giving thanks that I do not walk into it alone. You know the pressures I carry, the worries I hesitate to name, and the needs I am tempted to dismiss as trivial. I thank You that nothing in my life escapes Your attention. Help me to call upon You honestly today, without pretense or fear that my concerns are unworthy of Your care. Grant me the assurance that You are attentive to every step I take and every burden I lift toward You. Shape my trust so that it rests not in circumstances improving, but in Your faithful presence with me through them.

Jesus the Son,
I thank You for entering fully into human life and showing me what God’s nearness looks like in flesh and blood. You noticed the overlooked, listened to the hurting, and responded with compassion rather than impatience. Walk with me today as I face responsibilities and relationships that feel heavy or unresolved. Teach me to bring my daily needs to You with confidence, knowing that You understand them from the inside. When I am tempted to believe that my struggles are insignificant, remind me that You welcomed the small and the broken and called them worthy of attention and grace.

Holy Spirit,
I ask for Your guidance and quiet reassurance as I move through this day. Help me to recognize God’s nearness not only in moments of prayer, but in ordinary tasks and unexpected interruptions. Prompt my heart to turn toward God rather than inward when anxiety arises. Give me discernment to see where You are already at work and courage to trust Your leading. Shape my awareness so that I live today attentive to divine presence, open to insight, and responsive to Your gentle direction.

 

Thought for the Day

Begin this day by intentionally bringing one small concern to God in prayer, trusting that His nearness means it truly matters.

For further reflection on God’s attentive care, see this article from Christianity Today: https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2021/march-web-only/does-god-care-about-my-daily-life.html

 

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Picking Up the Pieces

Afternoon Moment

Scripture Reading: Lamentations 3:18–58
Key Verse: “You drew near on the day I called on You, and said, ‘Do not fear!’” — Lamentations 3:57

Afternoons often have a way of revealing our true emotional weather. Mornings may begin with resolve, and evenings may end with gratitude, but afternoons—especially on busy days—can expose the tiredness beneath our efforts. It is in those mid-day moments, when the weight of life presses hardest, that we need the gentle reminder that God is near, even in the places where we feel broken or overwhelmed.

Today’s story carries us into one of the deepest valleys of grief a parent can walk. Barbara Johnson, known for her humor, resilience, and faith-driven joy, experienced the devastating loss of her oldest son during the Vietnam War. She describes the painful scene of unpacking his duffel bag, sitting on the floor surrounded by the unmistakable smells of gear worn during battle, tears flowing as she and her husband revisited the memories of his childhood. Loss has a way of blending the past and present with unbearable clarity. Every item becomes a reminder of a life unfinished, every memory a bittersweet treasure.

But one detail stands out—a letter Barbara had written to her son shortly before his death. In her letter, she reminded him of Jesus’ love and assured him that no matter what happened, he would be safe with the Lord. That letter, found in his wallet, was wrinkled, blurred, and water-stained from the rice paddy where he fell. The beautiful ache of that discovery is almost hard to express. The words of a mother, given to comfort a son far from home, became the final earthly message he carried with him into eternity.

It was in that moment, in that grief-filled bedroom, that Barbara remembered Jeremiah’s laments. She felt connected to his cries in Lamentations 3. The phrases of the prophet fit her sorrow perfectly: “We had been afflicted and filled with bitter herbs. Our teeth had been broken on the gravel of grief.” That vivid language resonates with anyone who has tasted deep suffering. Grief does not arrive gently—it scrapes, crushes, and bruises the soul. Jeremiah knew it. Barbara knew it. Many of us know it too.

And yet, something else happened to Barbara that afternoon. As she held the battered letter in her hand, she remembered not just Jeremiah’s grief—but his hope. Lamentations 3 is not simply the poetry of pain; it is also the anthem of God’s steadfast love. In the very center of the book, at the deepest point of the prophet’s despair, a different kind of truth rises:

“Yet this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope:
The Lord’s mercies are new every morning.
Great is His faithfulness.”

Those words, spoken in the shadow of Jerusalem’s fall, anchor a truth that grief cannot erase: God’s compassion does not fail. His faithfulness is not canceled by our sorrow. His presence is not prevented by our pain.

Barbara realized something beautiful that day—something that has comforted thousands through her testimony. Though she and her family were broken, they still had hope. Though they were grieving, they still belonged to a God who renews His mercies every morning. Though they had sustained a terrible wound, they were not abandoned. That afternoon, her grief was not erased, but it was cradled by a deeper truth: God is near to the brokenhearted and saves those crushed in spirit.

There is a small, tender phrase tucked into today’s key verse: “You drew near.” It is one of the most comforting assurances in all of Scripture. God does not remain distant when pain strikes. He does not wait for us to regain strength before He approaches. He draws near in the moment we cry out. He whispers the words Jeremiah heard: “Do not fear.”

This is not the command of a stern commander—it is the encouragement of a compassionate Father. God is not telling us not to feel; He is telling us not to panic, not to despair, not to assume the darkness is permanent. Fear tightens the heart; hope loosens it. Fear isolates; God’s nearness restores. Fear says, “I cannot survive this”; God says, “I am with you even here.”

In the middle of your busy afternoon, perhaps you feel as though you are quietly picking up the pieces of something that has been broken in your own life. It may not be as devastating as the loss of a son; it may be something more subtle but still deeply painful. Relationships strained. Health uncertain. Responsibilities overwhelming. Fears whispering in the background of your mind. Or perhaps it is simply the accumulation of many small burdens that weigh you down.

Wherever this afternoon finds you, the message of Lamentations 3 remains unchanged: God draws near when you call. His love is not exhausted. His compassion has not worn thin. His mercies will meet you again tomorrow morning, even if today feels heavy.

And this is why Barbara could say, even while grieving, “We could pick up the pieces of our lives and move on.” Not because the pain vanished, not because time numbed the loss, but because hope had not been taken from them. They had a deposit in heaven. They had a promise in Christ. They had a God who stays close to the hurting and renews His mercies each new day.

As you step back into your work, your responsibilities, or your concerns, hear the quiet voice of the Lord saying to you what He said to Jeremiah: “Do not fear.” Let those words steady you. Let His nearness carry you. Let His faithfulness surround you. You may not have all the pieces yet, but you have the One who will help you gather them.

And He will walk with you, every step.

 

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