“’For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,’ declares the Lord. ‘As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.’” — Isaiah 55:8-9
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In Judges 7:12-22, God delivers one of the most unexpected victories in Scripture. No swords. No spears. No battle strategy that made sense on paper. Instead, God tells Gideon’s army to take a trumpet, a torch and a clay jar. What kind of army wins a war without weapons? The kind that trusts the unorthodox ways of God.
This moment reminds us that obedience often comes before understanding. Gideon and his men didn’t have the full picture, they only had instructions. Breaking jars and blowing trumpets in front of an enemy camp required faith, not logic. God was asking them to move forward without knowing how the story would end.
Once Gideon received confirmation of God’s promise, he didn’t keep it to himself — he inspired others to step forward in faith. Obedience has a ripple effect. When you move with confidence in what God has spoken, it gives courage to those watching you.
Isaiah 55:8-9 (above) reminds us why this kind of faith is necessary: God’s thoughts and ways are higher than ours. His plans rarely fit our expectations. That’s why we walk by faith and not by sight. Faith becomes the substance of what we hope for and the evidence of what we cannot yet see.
You may not know what God is up to in this season, but neither did Gideon. Still, when he did his part, God did His. The victory was never in the trumpet, the torch or the jar. It was in trusting God’s unseen plan. When you obey — even without understanding — God will move in ways only He can.
— Fleceia Comeaux, Houston Dash chaplain
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