Anxious about a health issue my teenage niece had, I was relieved when I heard of a promising natural remedy. My sister, however, felt it might cause side effects, based on her daughter’s medical history. I wanted to argue but refrained. No matter how concerned I was about my niece, I had to defer to her mom’s authority.
Later, a doctor told us, “That natural remedy would’ve caused a strong allergic reaction.” When it comes to my niece’s welfare, her mom truly knows what’s best for her—in ways that I don’t.
I remember this incident when I’m anxious about other loved ones, asking God to help them the way I think they should be helped. I remember that God, who loves them and knows them far better than I do, knows best.
In Isaiah 55:9, God says, “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways.” The Hebrew word here for ways (derek) refers to the moral actions and behavior of God contrasted with that of wicked people. God’s wisdom and righteous ways are far above ours. What happens in a loved one’s life may not be what we want, but we can trust Him to work in their lives as He sees best.
Let’s keep entrusting those we love to God by presenting “[our] requests to God” (Philippians 4:6). He alone is perfect in love, mercy, wisdom, and sovereignty (Isaiah 55:3, 7-11).
What concerns do you have for a loved one? How can you surrender your understanding of the situation to God’s wisdom?
Dear God, I entrust my loved ones into Your care. You alone know what’s best for them.
Isaiah 55:8-9 affirms God’s supremacy and incomparability. More than a thousand years before Isaiah prophesied, Job’s friend challenged the ancient patriarch: “Can you solve the mysteries of God? Can you discover everything about the Almighty? Such knowledge is higher than the heavens—and who are you? . . . What do you know?” (Job 11:7-8 nlt). An unanswered question asked by God’s people is this: “Who is like you—majestic in holiness, awesome in glory, working wonders?” (Exodus 15:11). God Himself challenged His people: “To whom will you compare me? Or who is my equal?” (Isaiah 40:25; see v. 18; 46:5). Because God is unlike any other being, our finite minds can never fully understand Him. Yet, this incomparable and incomprehensible God invites us to “come to [Him and] listen, that you may live” (55:3) and “call on him while he is near” (v. 6).