Hi pals.... what's good.
There are moments when obedience feels unreasonable. Taking an example from lady zarephath.
The widow of Zarephath was not living in abundance, she was surviving on fragments. A handful of flour. A little oil. One final meal planned… not for strength, but for surrender. She had already accepted the end. No hope of tomorrow. No backup plan. Just a quiet resignation: “that we may eat it...and die.”
And then God interrupts her ending. Not with provision first, but with a command. Through the prophet Elijah, God asks her to give… from her lack. “First, make me a small loaf of bread.”
Imagine the tension in her heart. God was not asking from her excess, He was asking from her last. This is the mystery of faith: God often invites us to trust Him when it makes the least sense.
She could have refused. She could have reasoned her way out. She could have chosen fear over faith. But instead, she obeyed. Not because she fully understood, but because something in her spirit chose to believe.
And that simple act, that trembling, costly, irrational obedience, became the doorway to supernatural provision. The flour did not run out. The oil did not dry up. Day after day, in the middle of famine, God sustained her… quietly, faithfully, continuously.
Notice this: God didn’t give her a warehouse of supply. He gave her daily dependence. Because sometimes, the greater miracle
is not overflow, but consistency in the unseen.
The widow learned what many of us struggle to accept: That God can be trusted… even when your hands look empty. That obedience is not about comfort, it’s about surrender. That when you place your “last” into God’s hands, it stops being the end of your story. It becomes the beginning of His.
Maybe today, you and I feel like that widow. Running low. Emotionally drained. Spiritually tired Holding onto something that feels like your “last”, your last strength, last hope, last chance.
And God is gently whispering, “Trust Me with it.” Not because He wants to take from you, but because He wants to show you that He is enough.
Enough when resources fail. Enough when logic doesn’t add up. Enough when the future feels uncertain. The jar may look small.
The oil may seem insufficient. But in the hands of God, little becomes unending. So don’t despise your “last.”
Give it to Him. Because sometimes, the miracle you are praying for
is waiting on the other side of your obedience, as simple as that may sound we're not far from the truth.
You're reading from your handsome friend John Petra!