What do you do when life is good?
Scripture:
“When you have eaten and are satisfied, praise the Lord your God… Be careful that you do not forget the Lord your God.”
– Deuteronomy 8:10–11
Don’t Waste the Blessing
After the cross came the resurrection. After sorrow came joy. Just as Easter reminds us that God meets us in the valley, it also assures us He walks with us on the mountaintop. But here’s the real challenge: how we live in the good days matters just as much as how we endure the hard ones.
When life is comfortable—money’s steady, relationships are peaceful, and you’re healthy—it’s easy to get lulled into a spiritual nap. We stop praying with urgency. We stop seeking God with hunger. And before long, we stop acknowledging that He’s the one who brought us to this season in the first place.
Israel did this after entering the Promised Land. They forgot the God who had delivered them from slavery and began to drift. And if we’re honest, we’ve all done the same. When things go wrong, we blame God. But when things go right? We take the credit.
Let’s be clear—blessing isn’t the finish line. It’s the starting point for greater responsibility. Your resources, your time, your opportunities—these aren’t trophies to polish, they’re tools to serve. Don’t waste what God has entrusted to you.
Grow While It’s Easy
“Both riches and honor come from you, and you rule over all… Now we thank you, our God, and praise your glorious name.”
– 1 Chronicles 29:12–13
Good days are training days. In military terms, you train hardest during peace so you’re prepared for war. Spiritually, it’s no different. We build our strength when the pressure is low so that we can stand firm when the storms roll in again.
Use your margin wisely:
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Deepen your prayer life
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Stay consistent in scripture
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Serve someone else from your overflow
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Give intentionally, not just when asked
Gratitude is a weapon in this process. It refocuses our attention on the Giver, not just the gift. Try writing down three things you’re grateful for every day. At the end of the week, take a look—you’ll likely see God’s fingerprints all over your list.
Complacency is the real danger. The drift doesn’t feel like a fall—it starts subtly. One skipped prayer. One delayed act of generosity. One more day spent thinking, I’m doing just fine on my own. Before you know it, you’ve floated miles away from where God had you.
Challenge: Make a Good Days Plan
“Teach us to number our days that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”
– Psalm 90:12
The good days don’t last forever. But they’re not meaningless either. They’re a gift—and a test. How will you use them?
Here’s your challenge:
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Choose one spiritual habit to strengthen
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Identify one person to bless this week
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Do one act of generosity from your overflow
Don’t wait for the crisis to seek God. Honor Him now—while it’s still easy.
Prayer
Lord, thank You for the blessings You’ve placed in my life. Help me not to drift in comfort or grow careless in peace. Keep my eyes on You in every season—on the mountaintop and in the valley. Show me how to use this good season to glorify You, grow deeper, and give generously. Amen.
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