Silas
Beloved
It is entirely right to bring every care to the Lord, including an eye examination. There is deep comfort in knowing that the steps of a righteous person are ordered by the Lord, and He has promised to guide you with His eye. As you go into this appointment, you can rest in the truth that the living God sees you completely. He knows the number of hairs on your head, and He certainly knows the intricate workings of your eyes. The anxiety you may feel about the outcome can be handed over to Him, because His chief concern is always your eternal good, not merely your temporary comfort.
When we pray, we often hope for a particular result that seems good to us, and that is a natural desire. It is like a warm greeting between dear friends, wishing that physical health might match a thriving soul. Yet true trust does not grip God’s arm and try to force a desired answer. Real trust begins exactly where our own understanding ends. It is easy to trust when things go the way we think they should, but faith is forged when the path is uncertain. You factor God into this situation, not as a formula for a clean bill of health, but as the One who is the health of your countenance and your God, regardless of what a human examination reveals.
If the report is good, it is a reason to praise Him. The soul rejoices, and we see His kindness in a very tangible way. But if the news is difficult, it does not mean He has cast you off or failed to listen. God is not like a human friend who might be on vacation and miss your call. His power is directed toward those who trust in Him. An eye consumed with grief, as the psalmist knew, can still turn to the Lord in hope. He can use limitations or trials to deepen your reliance on Him in ways that prosperity never could. The physical does not always match the spiritual, and we cannot always understand why one person remains in robust health and another suffers. That is not our burden to figure out.
What we can do is take a lesson from the young man who called Jesus good. Jesus immediately turned that phrase into a moment of revelation, helping the man see that only God is truly good. If your hope is placed in the goodness of God Himself, not just in a good medical result, then your footing is solid. You can walk into that office with your heart musing on good matters rather than dwelling on fear. The Lord is good, and He does good. That reality does not change with the dilation of a pupil or the reading of a chart.
So go calmly. Fight the good fight of faith by placing your confidence entirely in Him. Do not trust in the uncertainty of what you might see or hear, but trust in the God who richly gives you all things to enjoy. Whether the news brings immediate ease or a new challenge, know that He will continue to guide you. His eye is upon you, and that is the most important sight of all.
When we pray, we often hope for a particular result that seems good to us, and that is a natural desire. It is like a warm greeting between dear friends, wishing that physical health might match a thriving soul. Yet true trust does not grip God’s arm and try to force a desired answer. Real trust begins exactly where our own understanding ends. It is easy to trust when things go the way we think they should, but faith is forged when the path is uncertain. You factor God into this situation, not as a formula for a clean bill of health, but as the One who is the health of your countenance and your God, regardless of what a human examination reveals.
If the report is good, it is a reason to praise Him. The soul rejoices, and we see His kindness in a very tangible way. But if the news is difficult, it does not mean He has cast you off or failed to listen. God is not like a human friend who might be on vacation and miss your call. His power is directed toward those who trust in Him. An eye consumed with grief, as the psalmist knew, can still turn to the Lord in hope. He can use limitations or trials to deepen your reliance on Him in ways that prosperity never could. The physical does not always match the spiritual, and we cannot always understand why one person remains in robust health and another suffers. That is not our burden to figure out.
What we can do is take a lesson from the young man who called Jesus good. Jesus immediately turned that phrase into a moment of revelation, helping the man see that only God is truly good. If your hope is placed in the goodness of God Himself, not just in a good medical result, then your footing is solid. You can walk into that office with your heart musing on good matters rather than dwelling on fear. The Lord is good, and He does good. That reality does not change with the dilation of a pupil or the reading of a chart.
So go calmly. Fight the good fight of faith by placing your confidence entirely in Him. Do not trust in the uncertainty of what you might see or hear, but trust in the God who richly gives you all things to enjoy. Whether the news brings immediate ease or a new challenge, know that He will continue to guide you. His eye is upon you, and that is the most important sight of all.
