What is God’s provision for you?

July 29, 2007 | 2 comments

I’ve often heard testifiers at church meetings say something like, “I prayed for a new job. The perfect job appeared. I’m so grateful for God’s provision!”

As a general statement of truth, all good originates in God and comes from a spiritual source. But the above type of declaration has sometimes caused confusion for some people trying to understand how God meets human needs.

At surface appraisal, it appears to support the commonly held belief that material situations, things, and conditions are how God provides. After all, Jesus did heal sick bodies, strengthen weak limbs, and feed hungry mouths.

But Jesus also rebuked those who sought him for the fishes and the loaves—those who sought him for material indulgence.

He said, after trying to get away from a mob of people he had just fed,

I say unto you, Ye seek me, not because ye saw [understood] the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves, and were filled. Labour not for the meat which perisheth, but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of man shall give unto you…”

 

I sense that Jesus did not want people seeking him for material gratification. He wanted them to understand the spiritual truth he was teaching. He knew that spiritual truth understood and practiced led the way to eternal life where matter was no longer a factor. It did not lead to increased consumption of food, things, or worldly position.

As I think about how God provides, I remember that God is Spirit. God is not matter. Spirit is going to provide in only the way Spirit can provide—spiritually. So it stands to reason that God meets human needs through spiritual ways and means, which, as it turns out in practical experience, translates into daily supplies.

Years ago, when my wife and I designed and built a home for our family, we worked for many months on the plans. We’d come up with a drawing we liked and proclaim, “This is the perfect house for us!” Days later, after more prayer and consideration, we’d come up with a better plan and declare, “This is the perfect house for us!” More time would pass, new ideas would surface, a new plan would be drawn, and then, again we’d affirm, “THIS is the perfect house!” Well, I imagine you get the picture by now, that there is no such thing as a perfect material house. As new inspiration dawns, human plans change. The only perfect house anyone will ever have is the home God has built for us in heaven, in Mind. Until then, we catch improved glimpses of what the “perfect home” is like, and improve our human plans accordingly.

A lesson I gain from the above is that until the final spiritual idea we’re striving to demonstrate is in clear vivid view, the human interpretation is going to constantly revise and change. We may interpret a new view of spiritual reality as the “perfect job,” or “the perfect home” or the “ideal setting” at any given point in time. But it’s only a glimpse. It looks perfect at the moment because that’s as far as our understanding has grown. But increase your spiritual understanding of God, and the original divine idea is going to getter clearer in thought. What appeared to be ideal in the past is no longer ideal. You see something better appearing.

This is helpful to understand when faced with loss.

People have often seen something good happen in their lives as evidence of God’s love at work—and rightfully so. But they make the mistake of believing the good is IN the material thing, position or setting they’ve acquired. So, if someday that thing is lost, they feel deprived, lacking, and maybe even punished. It’s not that God’s good has failed them. God’s good never fails. It’s because they thought their good was material rather than spiritual, and matter always fails eventually! That’s a given!!

A lesson here is, never put your trust in matter if you don’t want to be overwrought with a feeling of loss someday. All good is spiritual, coming from Spirit, and forever intact in Mind.

But aside from that, if something we identified as good is lost, it’s simply a demand to go up higher in understanding to the real substance of that good.

I’ve heard of businessmen who became very wealthy, lost everything in catastrophic economic conditions, and gained it all back. I believe this happens because they knew that their wealth was not in money. It was in the wisdom, understanding and intelligence they possessed, and, which I believe, comes from above.

God’s provision is spiritual. When material conditions change, spiritual truth never changes. Our source is always God, the all-knowing, all-providing Mind that is ever caring for its beloved creation.

You will not fear loss when you understand all supply to be spiritual. With an understanding of spiritual substance, we see that there is no loss in matter for there is no gain there to begin with. All is Spirit, and everything and anything worth having is spiritual.

God’s provision for us is always spiritual.

 

“The depth, breadth, height, might, majesty, and glory of infinite Love fill all space. That is enough!” Mary Baker Eddy

 

2 thoughts on “What is God’s provision for you?”

  1. I like this statement of Jesus which reads, “Labor not for the meat that perisheth, but for the meat which endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of man shall give you; for him hath God the Father sealed.” To me it sounds similar to Jesus’ words, “You cannot serve God and mammon (with mammon being the meat that perisheth).”

    By contrast Paul says, as I paraphrase the verse, “If anyone will not work for the meat that perisheth, neither shall he eat the meat that perisheth.” This sounds logical, in the worldly sense. But I’ve added a few words of my own to this verse for humor’s sake. Forgive me. See 2 Thes. 3:10 for Paul’s exact quote.

    I think Paul was talking about the work of chipping-in with community chores, while Jesus was saying there is labor involved in following each of two different states of consciousness. And they should not be blended together.

    “The meat that perisheth,” as Jesus used the term, is, according to my figuring, following mortal mind consciousness (a.k.a. following The Prince of this World consciousness).

    “The meat which endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of man shall give you,” is, one might say, “The Kingdom of God is within you” consciousness, that reflects the Spirit of truth which the Son of man gave to the world following his crucifixion and subsequent glorification amongst his followers.

    This is my expansion of this verse.

    BTW: You’ve been writing some outstanding blogs lately, which keeps me thinking on the things of God, which I should be doing anyway.

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