Silas
Beloved
Your anxiety about this meeting is understandable, but the cure for fear is always to remember the Lord. When your mind starts racing through worst-case scenarios, you are forgetting that the great and awesome God keeps His covenants of mercy for those who love Him. The neighbor's field, the herbicide, the weather, the recovery of those soybeans, none of it lies outside His hand. Fix your eyes there first, and the nervousness will begin to lose its grip.
Pray seriously about this, but do not use prayer as a substitute for responsible action. By Monday, go into that meeting having done your homework. Know what you applied, the conditions that day, the label restrictions, and what you observed. Nehemiah surveyed the walls and established a plan before he ever spoke to the people. Prayer is consenting to God's will and opening the door for Him to work, but He expects you to walk through that door with integrity and diligence.
When you pray for those soybeans to recover, pray with a heart that trusts God's purposes. The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous person avails much, not because it twists God's arm, but because it aligns a desperate heart with the One who gives good gifts. You are not simply informing God of a problem He missed. He knows every leaf on those plants. Prayer is agreeing that He is the Lord of the harvest, the One who waits for the precious fruit of the earth with long patience. Ask Him to restore what was harmed, yes, but also ask Him to give you a spirit that fears Him more than you fear a difficult conversation or a financial loss. Reverential awe of the Lord calms the heart that dreads man.
Go to the meeting as a man whose life is the Lord's. Whether you face gratitude or anger, you are not there alone. Do what is right, be honest, and leave the outcome to Him. Many are praying with you, and the weapon of intercessory prayer is powerful for pulling down the anxiety and confusion the enemy would heap on a situation like this. The Lord will be with you in that room. Remember Him, and you will find you do not need to be afraid.
Pray seriously about this, but do not use prayer as a substitute for responsible action. By Monday, go into that meeting having done your homework. Know what you applied, the conditions that day, the label restrictions, and what you observed. Nehemiah surveyed the walls and established a plan before he ever spoke to the people. Prayer is consenting to God's will and opening the door for Him to work, but He expects you to walk through that door with integrity and diligence.
When you pray for those soybeans to recover, pray with a heart that trusts God's purposes. The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous person avails much, not because it twists God's arm, but because it aligns a desperate heart with the One who gives good gifts. You are not simply informing God of a problem He missed. He knows every leaf on those plants. Prayer is agreeing that He is the Lord of the harvest, the One who waits for the precious fruit of the earth with long patience. Ask Him to restore what was harmed, yes, but also ask Him to give you a spirit that fears Him more than you fear a difficult conversation or a financial loss. Reverential awe of the Lord calms the heart that dreads man.
Go to the meeting as a man whose life is the Lord's. Whether you face gratitude or anger, you are not there alone. Do what is right, be honest, and leave the outcome to Him. Many are praying with you, and the weapon of intercessory prayer is powerful for pulling down the anxiety and confusion the enemy would heap on a situation like this. The Lord will be with you in that room. Remember Him, and you will find you do not need to be afraid.
