When Seeking Becomes Knowing

“Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded.” — James 4:8

There is a difference between being around God and actually seeking Him. It is a difference that is not always visible from the outside, but it is unmistakable in the condition of the heart. Many of us have learned how to be present in religious spaces—how to attend, how to participate, even how to speak the language of faith. Yet Scripture gently presses beyond these outward expressions and asks a deeper question: What is happening within? When James writes, “Draw near to God,” the Greek word ἐγγίζω (engizō) carries the sense of intentional movement, a deliberate closing of distance. This is not accidental proximity; it is a chosen pursuit. And the promise attached to it is just as striking—God responds. He draws near in return.

What begins to unfold is the realization that seeking God is not primarily about activity but about alignment. The call to cleanse our hands and purify our hearts speaks to both action and intention. The phrase “double-minded” comes from the Greek δίψυχος (dipsychos), meaning “two-souled” or divided within oneself. It describes a person whose affections are split, whose desires are pulled between God and something else. Seeking God, then, becomes an act of re-centering. It is the quiet but decisive turning of the whole self toward Him. This is why the psalmist can say, “Seek the Lord and His strength; seek His face evermore” (Psalm 105:4). To seek His face is not to pursue His benefits, but His presence.

I find myself asking the same question Jesus posed to those who followed Him: “Why do you seek Me?” (John 1:38). It is a question that exposes motive. Am I seeking Him for what He can do, or for who He is? There is a subtle but significant difference. One treats God as a means to an end; the other recognizes Him as the end itself. Jeremiah captures this beautifully when he writes, “You will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart” (Jeremiah 29:13). The Hebrew word for heart, לֵב (lev), encompasses the mind, will, and affections. It is the center of one’s being. To seek God with the heart is to bring the entirety of oneself into the pursuit.

This kind of seeking transforms a person. It moves us from being observers of faith to participants in it. It shifts our relationship with God from distant awareness to intimate knowledge. And this is where the promise of Hebrews 8:11 begins to take shape: “They shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest.” The word γινώσκω (ginōskō) once again reminds us that this knowing is relational, experiential, and deeply personal. It is not reserved for a select few; it is available to all who seek Him sincerely. The barriers we often assume exist—our past, our doubts, our inconsistencies—are not obstacles to God’s willingness to be known. What He desires is not perfection, but devotion.

It is also important to recognize that seeking God is not a one-time decision but a continual posture. Like the deer that pants for water in Psalm 42:1, there is an ongoing longing that draws us back again and again. This longing is not a sign of deficiency; it is evidence of life. A soul that no longer thirsts for God has settled for something less. But a soul that continues to seek is being shaped, refined, and drawn deeper into the heart of God. As A.W. Tozer once observed, “Complacency is a deadly foe of all spiritual growth.” The pursuit of God keeps us from settling into spiritual routine and invites us into a living relationship.

There is a quiet invitation in all of this that reshapes how we approach our daily walk. It is not about doing more, but about desiring differently. It is about allowing our love for God to become the driving force behind everything else. When that happens, Scripture is no longer just information—it becomes conversation. Prayer is no longer obligation—it becomes communion. And obedience is no longer burdensome—it becomes a natural response to the One we love.

On Second Thought

There is a paradox hidden within the call to seek God that we often overlook. We are told to draw near to Him, to pursue Him with all our heart, to long for His presence as if it were something distant or elusive. Yet at the same time, Scripture reveals that God is not hiding from us—He is already near. “The word is very near you, in your mouth and in your heart” (Deuteronomy 30:14). Even more striking, the promise of the new covenant declares that God Himself has taken the initiative: “I will put My law in their minds, and write it on their hearts” (Jeremiah 31:33). In other words, the One we are seeking has already moved toward us.

This raises an unexpected question: if God is already near, why must we seek Him? The answer lies not in His distance, but in our awareness. Seeking God is less about finding Him and more about awakening to Him. It is the process by which our distracted, divided hearts are brought into alignment with a reality that has been present all along. We do not draw God closer by seeking Him; we become conscious of the nearness that was always there. The act of seeking changes us, not Him.

This reframes everything. It means that the longing we feel is not evidence of God’s absence, but of His invitation. It means that the struggle to focus, to pray, to remain attentive is not a sign of failure, but part of the journey toward deeper awareness. And it means that when we finally “find” God, what we are really discovering is that He has been faithfully present all along, waiting for us to turn our hearts fully toward Him.

So perhaps the greater question is not, “Where is God?” but “Where is my heart?” And as we begin to answer that honestly, we find that the path to knowing God is not hidden. It is opened by a heart that is willing to seek, to surrender, and to remain.

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The Freedom of Letting Go

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DID YOU KNOW

Scripture Focus: Luke 9:57–62; James 1:6–8

Did You Know that Following Jesus May Lead You Away from Comfort but Closer to Joy?
When a man told Jesus, “I will follow You wherever You go,” the Lord answered with a sobering reality: “Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay His head.” (Luke 9:57–58). Those words may sound discouraging at first, but they reveal one of the most liberating truths in all of Scripture. To follow Christ means discovering that joy doesn’t come from comfort—it comes from companionship. Jesus didn’t promise luxury, but He promised Himself. He offered not a life of ease, but a life of purpose.

We often equate peace with security—having enough money, a stable home, or predictable routines. But true peace comes from knowing the One who is unshakable. Jesus invites us to trade the illusion of safety for the reality of His presence. The disciples who followed Him left behind their nets, homes, and familiarity, yet found a treasure far greater than what they lost. Their joy wasn’t found in the road they traveled, but in the One who walked beside them. When we release our hold on comfort, God fills our hearts with contentment that no circumstance can take away.

Maybe today, comfort has become your quiet cage. Ask yourself—what would it look like to follow Jesus into deeper dependence? When you learn to trust Him beyond your routines, you’ll find that peace isn’t tied to where you rest your head, but to where your heart abides.

 

Did You Know that God’s Call Isn’t Bound by Human Expectations?
In Luke 9:59–60, Jesus said to a man, “Follow Me,” but the man hesitated, saying, “Lord, first let me go and bury my father.” Jesus replied, “Let the dead bury their own dead, but you go and proclaim the kingdom of God.” This statement sounds harsh until we understand the culture. The man’s father was likely still alive—he wanted to remain home until after his death, fulfilling social and family obligations. Jesus was revealing something radical: divine calling takes precedence over social custom.

So often, our lives are shaped by the expectations of others—family, friends, or society. We long to please, to fit in, to keep peace. But there comes a moment when following Jesus requires breaking free from the gravitational pull of approval. Christ doesn’t diminish the importance of family or duty, but He insists that obedience to God comes first. He calls us to reorder our loves, placing Him at the center. That’s not cold detachment—it’s spiritual freedom. When we make Him our first priority, we become better sons, daughters, parents, and friends because His love begins to define our relationships.

You may find yourself caught between loyalty to people and obedience to God. Ask the Spirit for courage to choose faithfulness over familiarity. God’s call may not always fit the world’s script, but it always leads to life. Following Christ means trusting that His timing, His path, and His approval are enough.

 

Did You Know that Following Jesus Sometimes Means Walking Away from What You Love Most?
Another man said, “I will follow You, Lord, but first let me go back and say good-bye to my family.” (Luke 9:61–62). Jesus replied, “No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God.” Christ saw the man’s hesitation for what it was—a divided heart. He knew that looking back often leads to staying back. It wasn’t that Jesus despised family; it was that He understood how quickly the familiar can drown out the call of faith.

Every disciple of Jesus eventually reaches a crossroads between affection and obedience. We may not all be asked to leave our homes or families, but we are all called to prioritize God’s mission above all else. That requires surrender—sometimes of relationships, sometimes of approval, and often of control. But when we release what tethers us to the past, we open our hands to receive what God has planned for our future.

Think about Peter leaving his nets, or Paul turning from prestige to persecution. Their sacrifices looked like loss at first, but in time they discovered that obedience to Christ is never a subtraction—it’s always an exchange. When you give up what hinders your calling, you gain what fulfills it. If your heart feels torn between what was and what could be, remember Jesus’ words. The one who sets his hand to the plow must keep his eyes on the harvest. Look forward—because what’s ahead with Christ is always greater than what’s behind.

 

Did You Know that Divided Loyalty Drains Spiritual Power?
James wrote, “The man who trusts God but with inward reservations cannot hope to receive anything from the Lord… a man of divided loyalty will reveal instability at every turn.” (James 1:6–8, Phillips). Divided loyalty is one of the quietest thieves of spiritual growth. It’s not rebellion—it’s hesitation. It’s saying, “Yes, Lord,” with our lips but “Maybe later” with our hearts. And yet, God desires complete availability. When our focus is fractured, our faith falters.

Jesus illustrated this same truth when He said that no one who looks back is fit for service in God’s kingdom. The plowman must look ahead to keep his rows straight; the believer must keep eyes fixed on Christ to walk in strength. Distraction, compromise, or divided devotion can make us spiritually dizzy. The good news is that God doesn’t demand perfection—He desires direction. If our hearts are pointed toward Him, even imperfectly, His Spirit straightens our path.

In a world where multitasking is celebrated, God calls us to single-minded devotion. That doesn’t mean abandoning our responsibilities—it means filtering every part of life through His will. True peace comes not from having everything figured out, but from being fully aligned with God’s purpose. When you give Him your undivided heart, you’ll find stability even when life shifts beneath your feet.

 

God’s Word invites us to ask a simple but searching question: From His perspective, are we truly available to Him? Each of these “Did You Know” moments leads us to the same truth—availability begins with surrender. Jesus isn’t looking for perfect followers; He’s looking for willing ones. The ones who say yes even when comfort fades, yes even when expectations clash, yes even when love requires letting go.

So, what would it take to make yourself available to God today? Maybe it means loosening your grip on comfort, redefining success, or trusting Him with what you fear to lose. Whatever it is, remember—freedom is found not in holding on, but in letting go. When you release your life into His hands, you’ll find that His purpose is not only greater than yours—it’s better than you ever imagined.

 

For further encouragement on surrendering to God’s call, read Following Jesus Without Hesitation on The Gospel Coalition .

 

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