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DAY 5 FRIDAY | At The End of the Day… Stand on What God Said | The Power of Agreement

  • Writer: Angela U Burns
    Angela U Burns
  • 17 hours ago
  • 4 min read

Opinions change. Emotions shift. People change their minds. But there comes a point where believers must decide whether God’s Word is truly enough to stand on.


Father, we acknowledge You today and always as our Creator, our Helper, our Redeemer. As we come before You once again, we ask that You would help us to stand firmly on Your Word even when life feels uncertain. Strengthen our faith when we grow weary, discouraged, or confused. Teach us to trust what You have spoken above what we see, feel, or hear around us. In Jesus’ name, amen.


At the end of the day, every believer will eventually face moments where emotions, people, circumstances, and even timelines become unstable. 


And in those moments, the real question becomes: What are we truly standing on? Who are we standing with?


In reality, some people stand on opinions. Some stand on feelings. Some stand on what others predict. But who are we? Believers in the Lord Jesus Christ. And we are called to stand on the Word of God. Hallelujah.


Psalm 20:7 (KJV): “Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the Lord our God.”


Family, God’s Word is not unstable. It does not need revising. It does not panic under pressure. It does not change because circumstances have changed. 


Psalm 119:89 (KJV) says: “For ever, O Lord, thy word is settled in heaven.”


That is why agreement with God’s Word matters so much. Feelings can shift overnight. Crowds can change quickly. People can support you one season and disappear the next. But what God has spoken remains true.


Titus 1:2 (KJV) says: “In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began.” And the more familiar scripture: Numbers 23:19 (KJV) “God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?”


Not “might not lie.” Not “usually tells the truth.” The Bible says God cannot lie. 


And we have proven this in our own lives. We have seen the manifestation of His Word time and time again. He says what He means and means what He says. What He has spoken over our lives, He is faithful to perform in His time and according to His will.


Jeremiah 1:12 (KJV), “…for I will hasten my word to perform it.”


That means when God speaks, believers can stand on His Word even before they see results.


Jochebed understood this. She hid her son Moses during one of the darkest seasons for Hebrew families. Pharaoh had ordered male Hebrew babies to be killed, yet she trusted God enough to protect the child God had entrusted to her.


She did not know how the story would end. She did not yet see deliverance. But she acted in faith before seeing the outcome. The account is in the book of Exodus.


Truth is, some of us, as believers, are waiting to trust God once everything becomes clear. But here’s the thing: faith often means standing on God’s Word before clarity arrives.


Hebrews 6:18 (KJV) says: “…it was impossible for God to lie…” Impossible. That means God’s character is more dependable than our emotions, fears, or changing situations.


Anna, the Prophetess, also understood this kind of faithfulness. It’s in the book of Luke.


For years, she continued serving God faithfully in the temple. She waited through disappointment, loss, aging, and long seasons without visible change. Yet she remained devoted.


Some of us, as believers, are spiritually exhausted because the waiting season lasted longer than expected. Delayed answers can make people question themselves. Discouragement can make people emotionally tired. Spiritual fatigue can make people wonder if standing in faith is even worth it anymore.


But understand this today: God never told us to stand on feelings. He told us to stand on His Word.


Isaiah 55:11 (KJV) says: “So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void…”


God’s Word does not return empty. Even when we do not immediately see movement, God is still faithful to what He has spoken.


Ebed-melech was an Ethiopian (Cushite) servant or official in the king’s house during the time of the prophet Jeremiah. He understood this, too.


While others resisted Jeremiah and rejected truth, Ebed-melech believed enough to act. He helped rescue Jeremiah from the pit when others abandoned him.


Sometimes standing with truth means standing differently from the crowd.


Agreement with God’s Word will not always make believers popular, comfortable, or understood by everyone around us. But it will keep us anchored.


And we need that reminder today. Because life can become emotionally noisy:

People speak.

Fear speaks.

Disappointment speaks.

Delay speaks.

Social media speaks.

Pressure speaks.


But as believers, we must learn to ask: What is God saying?


At the end of the day, the safest agreement a believer can make is an agreement with God’s Word. 


Not blind optimism. Not denial. Not pretending difficulties do not exist. But choosing to trust that God remains truthful, faithful, and dependable even when life feels uncertain.


Because everything else may change. But God’s Word still stands.


Click here for the full Live Empowerment Session: https://www.youtube.com/live/QHEFpn0TNG8?si=xuvXQ8w4TdCSwNaZ

 
 
 

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