When God Interrupts the Routine

A Day in the Life

“So when the Lord saw that he turned aside to look, God called to him from the midst of the bush and said, ‘Moses, Moses!’ And he said, ‘Here I am.’”
—Exodus 3:4

There are days in my life that feel completely ordinary. I wake up, follow the same routines, move through familiar responsibilities, and close the day much like it began. Yet Scripture repeatedly reminds me that God often chooses those very moments—the most ordinary ones—to reveal something extraordinary. When I read the story of Moses and the burning bush, I am struck by how simple the setting is. Moses was not praying in a temple or performing a great act of worship. He was tending sheep in the wilderness, doing the daily work that had become routine after forty years in Midian.

Then something unusual caught his attention. The text tells us that Moses saw a bush burning, but it was not consumed. At first glance, it may have appeared like any other desert fire, but something about it drew his attention. The Hebrew word for “turned aside” in Exodus 3:4 is סוּר (sur), which carries the idea of deliberately changing direction. Moses did not merely glance at the bush and keep walking; he altered his course to examine what was happening. That small decision—to stop and look—became the doorway to one of the most important moments in biblical history.

The verse tells us something remarkable: “When the Lord saw that he turned aside to look, God called to him.” The encounter with God did not begin when the bush appeared; it began when Moses responded to what he saw. That observation alone has shaped how I think about spiritual awareness. God was already present in that moment. The burning bush was already there. The divine voice was ready to speak. But the conversation began only after Moses paused long enough to pay attention.

I find myself wondering how many moments like that occur in our lives. We often assume that God speaks primarily during formal worship or structured prayer times. Yet the Bible repeatedly shows that many of God’s most significant encounters happen in unexpected places. Abraham heard God’s promise under the open sky. Elijah encountered the Lord on a mountain through a still small voice. The disciples were called while mending nets beside the Sea of Galilee. Even the shepherds heard the announcement of Christ’s birth while simply watching their flocks at night.

Jesus Himself often taught in those ordinary spaces. Some of His most meaningful lessons occurred along dusty roads, around shared meals, or beside the water’s edge. When I reflect on the life of Jesus, I notice that He rarely separated the sacred from the everyday. Instead, He revealed that God’s presence could be encountered in the middle of daily life. The ordinary became the setting for divine revelation.

The Scottish preacher Oswald Chambers once wrote, “God speaks in the ordinary things of life—the burning bushes are everywhere.” That observation reminds me that spiritual attentiveness is not about chasing dramatic experiences; it is about learning to notice the quiet ways God moves around us. When we rush through life without reflection, we may miss the moments God has prepared.

This idea is reinforced by another well-known Christian thinker, A.W. Tozer, who observed, “God is constantly trying to speak to men, but men are too busy to listen.” I have found that to be true in my own life. My schedule fills quickly with responsibilities, obligations, and distractions. Yet Scripture invites me to slow down and become aware of God’s presence within those very moments.

The story of Moses reminds me that God had been preparing him for decades before that encounter. Moses had once been raised in Pharaoh’s palace, educated in the wisdom of Egypt, and positioned for leadership. Yet after fleeing Egypt, he spent forty years as a shepherd in the wilderness. Those years may have seemed quiet and uneventful, but God was shaping his character, teaching humility, and preparing him for the task ahead. What appeared to be an ordinary life was actually a season of preparation.

When the burning bush appeared, it marked the culmination of those quiet years. God spoke Moses’ name—twice—calling him personally into the mission that would define the rest of his life. The moment Moses stopped to look became the turning point of history for Israel. The liberation of an entire nation began with a man pausing long enough to notice what God was doing.

This story challenges me to reconsider how I approach the routines of my own life. I may be running errands, working at my desk, or speaking with a neighbor, and yet God may be arranging something significant within those moments. The apostle Paul reminds believers that God is actively at work in our lives: “For it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure” (Philippians 2:13). That means the ordinary rhythms of our days may carry divine purpose we cannot yet see.

Sometimes the opportunity for a divine encounter appears as a conversation with someone who needs encouragement. At other times it may appear as a thought or conviction that invites us to change direction. It might even come through an unexpected interruption that forces us to pause. Those moments can easily be dismissed as inconveniences if we are too hurried to notice.

The lesson from Moses is simple but powerful: when something unusual catches your attention, do not ignore it. Pause long enough to look. Ask whether God may be speaking through that moment. The burning bush was not just a miracle—it was an invitation. Moses responded with three simple words: “Here I am.” That response reveals the posture of a heart ready to listen.

Perhaps today will be filled with familiar routines for you as well. You may move through meetings, errands, or household responsibilities. Yet somewhere within those moments, God may be preparing an encounter that will shape your life or the life of someone around you. The challenge is not to manufacture a spiritual experience but to remain attentive enough to recognize it when it appears.

For further reflection on discerning God’s voice in everyday life, you may find this article helpful:
https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/how-does-god-guide-us

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When the Word Reads Us Before We Read It

A Day in the Life

“For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword … and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.”
Hebrews 4:12

There are moments in the life of Jesus when His words land gently, and moments when they cut cleanly to the center of the human heart. Walking with Him through the Gospels, I am repeatedly struck by how rarely people remain neutral in His presence. Some are comforted, others unsettled, still others quietly exposed. Hebrews 4:12 helps me understand why. God’s Word is not static ink on a page; it is living—zōn—active, present, and engaged. When Jesus spoke, Scripture was not merely being explained; it was being enacted. His words did not simply inform the mind but discerned the heart. That same living Word now meets us each day, and if we are honest, it often meets us before we are ready.

If Scripture ever makes us uneasy, we are not doing something wrong; we are experiencing something true. The Word of God has a way of finding the precise place where alignment is needed. When I read the Gospels and feel as though a passage is aimed directly at me, it is not because the Bible is harsh, but because it is personal. As John Calvin once observed, “The Word of God is not only a lamp to show us the way, but a mirror in which we see ourselves.” Jesus’ teaching consistently revealed what lay beneath outward obedience—motives, intentions, and hidden loyalties. He spoke about anger beneath civility, lust beneath restraint, pride beneath religious practice. The discomfort that follows is not condemnation; it is conviction, and conviction is always purposeful.

Hebrews reminds us that God’s Word discerns the thoughts and intents of the heart. The Greek term enthymēseōn refers to inner deliberations, the quiet reasoning we rarely voice. The Word reaches into those internal conversations where excuses are formed and self-justifications rehearsed. When Jesus addressed forgiveness, generosity, humility, or truthfulness, He was not managing behavior but reshaping the heart from which behavior flows. If I struggle with careless speech, Scripture does not simply tell me to talk less; it confronts the condition of my heart. If forgiveness feels impossible, God’s Word does not soften the standard; it reveals the deeper wound that must be healed. Always, the Word addresses what truly needs attention.

Yet there is a temptation that quietly follows conviction: avoidance. The study rightly notes how easy it is to escape discomfort by distancing ourselves from God’s voice. Neglecting Scripture, skipping worship, or avoiding people who speak truth can dull the sharp edge of the Word. Over time, what once felt unsettling simply goes unheard. Dietrich Bonhoeffer warned against this subtle resistance when he wrote, “One act of obedience is better than one hundred sermons.” Avoidance protects comfort, but it arrests growth. Jesus never allowed His disciples to remain untouched by truth, because untouched hearts remain unchanged hearts.

The better response is the prayer of the psalmist: “Search me, O God, and know my heart.” This is not a prayer for self-condemnation but for clarity. It invites God to do what only He can—name what we cannot see clearly in ourselves. Paul echoes this posture in Ephesians 5:26, describing the Word as water that washes and cleanses. Washing is not violent, but it is thorough. When I allow Scripture to wash over me regularly, I begin to recognize patterns, assumptions, and habits that need surrender. The Word does not merely expose; it restores. Its aim is always conformity to Christ, never humiliation.

Walking with Jesus day by day means taking His words seriously—not selectively, not defensively, but faithfully. Each encounter with Scripture becomes an opportunity to ask, “Lord, what are You saying to me about my life today?” This habit transforms Bible reading from information gathering into discipleship. As the early church father Athanasius wrote, “The holy Scriptures are enough to make us wise unto salvation.” They are enough because they lead us to Jesus, and Jesus leads us into truth that sets us free.

For further reading on how Scripture shapes the heart of a believer, this article may serve you well:
https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/the-word-of-god-is-living-and-active

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