𪴠Mosaic Week 5âLearning to Do Hard Things
Visiting memories of high school exams and the reminder, we can doâand are called toâhard things
Happy Friday!
This week has celebrated the end of our daughterâs first semester in high school, weâve frozen and thawed through nose-hair-freezing temps of -43C 𼜠(with the windchill) and done the usual back-and-forth in the car moving from home, to school and activities.
Sharing some thoughts today on discipleship and a few articles for your encouragement!
Grace & Peace,
Amber
Contents: This WeekâŚ
đ In Reflections - Learning to Do Hard Things, Again
đ On the Blog
đ On My Shelf
đď¸ In Articles (curated content just for you)
Learning To Do Hard Things Again
My daughter wrote her first high school exams this week, and I found myself drifting backward in timeâremembering my own.
The hordes of students packed into the hallway outside the gymnasium. The doors opening. Rows of desks waiting inside, each one holding a single exam. Every cough, every sniffle, every pencil drop echoing through the space as teachersâ squeaky footsteps paced the floor.
We talked about preparing and studyingâabout what felt familiar and what felt different. She told me about the accommodations her school now offers: some students beginning exams ahead of time in class, others finishing at lunch if they didnât complete the three-hour sitting.
Certainly, some students truly need this. And yet, I couldnât shake the quiet concern that sometimes, in our efforts to make things easier, we unintentionally reinforce a sense of fragility. They think, âI canât do this, itâs too hardâ and our unspoken message can sound like: You canât do this. And our response becomes: Youâre rightâletâs lower the bar.
But part of growing upâpart of being formedâis learning that we can do hard things.
And this isnât just about schoolwork, chores, or workouts. Itâs about faith.
When we expect life to be smooth, when we assume challenges should be softened for us, we forget not only the daily shape of Christian discipleship but also the mission of God itself.
Indulgence comes easily.
Self-control is a daily struggle.
Confession and repentance are vulnerable and tenderâyet they deepen humility and faith.
Loving our enemies and praying for those who persecute us? A tall order.
Establishing rhythms of Scripture, prayer, and accountabilityâthese, too, lead us into hard things.
Scripture never presents the gospel as effortless. We are called to belong to Christ, indwelt by the Holy Spirit, equipped for good worksâfor Godâs glory and the good of others. Thereâs nothing simple or easy about it.
In 1 Kings 17, an ordinary man suddenly steps into Israelâs story. Baal has taken hold of the nation through King Ahab and his Sidonian wife, Jezebel. Against this backdrop of compromise and fear, Elijah simply believes the word of the Lordâand acts on it.
He doesnât shy away from hard things.
Elijah knows God, trusts Him, and follows Him straight into obedience that will bring hardshipâobedience that will magnify Godâs glory and deepen his own faith.
He proclaimed Godâs word.
After Elijahâs brief introduction in 1 Kings, he wastes no time. He steps straight into the presence of the king and speaks words that carry weight and consequence.
He declares that Yahwehâthe God of Israelâis alive. And he reminds Ahab of a promise spoken generations earlier, in the days of Moses: that if the nation turned from the Lord, the rain would cease (Deut. 11:13â17).
This is not Elijah offering an opinion or airing personal frustration. He is not reacting to Ahabâs leadership style or political decisions. He is speaking the word of the Lord to a people who belong to God.
Israel was set apart by God and for Godâto be a light to the nations. And they had wandered far from that calling.
Elijah stands before the leader of Israel and prophetically speaks truth that is both confrontational and faithful. He names reality as God sees it.
And in that, we are reminded of our own calling.
As Godâs people, we are image-bearersâliving witnesses of His character to the world. We are called to attend carefully to our sin through confession and repentance, to care deeply about the purity of Christâs bride, and to loveâtruly loveâthe grace of the gospel that restores us.
He prayed Godâs Word.
James tells us that Elijah was a man of fervent prayer (5:17-18). A man ordinary like us, yet earnest and persistent. He prayed according to the word of God, and the heavens responded.
That raises a question to reflect on.
Am I growing in earnest prayerânot only for myself and my family, but for the church? For the gospel to go forth to the nations? For labourers to be sent into the harvest? For colleagues and loved ones who do not yet know Christ?
It is also worth noticing what Elijahâs prayer cost him.
The drought he prayed for would not only affect a wicked king or devoted Baal-worshipersâit would affect everyone, himself included. Elijah is driven into hiding. He waits by a brook until it dries up. And there, in the wilderness, God provides.
Ravens bring him bread and meat. His body is sustained, yesâbut so is his faith. God provides, nourishing him not just physically but also spiritually. In obscurity and dependence, Elijah learns again that the Lord is faithful.
Isnât it exactly hereâin seasons of suffering and sojourningâthat our trust grows deepest? As we watch God provide, again and again, He proves Himself faithful to His people.
He obeyed Godâs Word.
âSo he went and did according to the word of the Lordâ (1 Kings 17:5)
Elijahâs obedience doesnât look easy. Itâs hard to imagine the courage required to confront King Ahabâknowing full well there would be consequences, knowing his life would likely be threatened.
Obedience is hard.
And yet Scripture is clear: obedience flows from love.
Jesus says, âIf you love me, you will keep my commandmentsâ (John 14:15). We are exhorted not to return to former ways of life (1 Pet. 1:14), and reminded that faithfulness may require us to obey God rather than men (Acts 5:29).
Elijah obeys not because obedience is safe or simple, but because he knows the Lord who has spoken. Knowing and believing God, he steps forwardâtrusting that the same God who commands also sustains.
And when obedience feels costly, we look to Christ.
Jesus is our truest example. He humbled Himself, becoming obedient to the point of deathâeven death on a cross (Phil. 2:8). He endured suffering, despised the shame, and remained faithful for the joy set before Him (Heb. 12:1â3).
This kind of obedience is not something we produce through our own strength. It is the work of the Spirit within us, sustained by grace, enabling us to persevere in faith.
So when obedience feels heavy, we remember that Christ has gone before us and now intercedes for us. He is present with us. He will provide what we need for the next faithful step.
Obedience may never be easyâbut it is never empty. It always bears fruit.
What hard act of obedience might the Lord be using to deepen your trust in Him today?
đ On the Blog
Abiding Notes #7 - On Creating a Personal Curriculum
Abiding Notes is a simple collection of reflections and moments from the weekâsnapshots of life and faith in the middle of full days. My hope is that these small notes encourage you to pause, look to Christ, and keep abiding in Him with grace and hope.
âď¸ Also find my article on the Sacred Ordinary of Making - on creating as image-bearers of God.
đ On My Shelf
Iâm perusing through this commentary on 1 & 2 Kings for our ladies bible study on Elijah
Found a novel written by Trevin Wax on sale. I always find it interesting when nonfiction authors write a novel, so Iâm looking forward to it!
And I made a more extravagant purchase in Steph Curryâs new book, Shot Ready. My kids are loving itâand so am I! Weâre a basketball loving family, so this hits all the feels.
đď¸ In Articles
Did You Know that God Delights in You?
âHave you ever considered that âlikeâ and âloveâ are two very different expressions? To like someone means we delight in being with them. Love at times carries this idea of obligationâthis person loves me because they have to, but do they truly enjoy my presence and like me?â (Thanks Lara d'Entremont for this encouragement!)
Making Sense of Praying With Faith
Prayers of faith arenât about controlling outcomes, but about trusting Godâs promises. We pray boldly where He has spoken clearly, and we entrust the rest to His wise and hidden willâbelieving He hears us and that He is at work, even when the answers arenât yet clear. I think this will encourage you as you pray, as it did me.
Be At Rest
I really appreciated Keriâs reminder that rest is obedience. In the hustle and bustle of life, we will be busy doing many of the good things God has called us to, but itâs an act of faith and obedience to let things go for a moment to pause and trust that Heâs got it all in His hands.
A Simple Approach to Evangelism
Hereâs a short encouragement on one thing you can do, and one thing you can say as we endeavour to share the gospel with others. Iâm planning to do both!!
Come and See More of Me
âTo see Jesus doesnât simply mean to notice him, to give him a passing glance, to know facts about him. It means seeing him spiritually with the perspective of faith. We need God to give us spiritual sight â new lenses â that we may behold Jesus as compellingly lovely and satisfying.â
*Grab your free download: Growing in Grace: A Busy Christianâs Guide to Must-Read Books






Oof, I needed this, Amber; thank you so much for sharing such thoughtful words. The hard things are usually what bring us into God's good plan for us!
I've been extra into the intentionality of prayer lately, and this rang true to that sentiment. Prayer can be hard to initiate sometimes, especially routinely, as you mention here, but the reward is so great. The Father literally has given us a way to intercede in life or death matters, and what is more beautiful than that?
Our oldest just finished the first semester of final exams for Gr.12. We had fun pulling out my provincial English exam from 22 years ago, and then she happily let me know yesterday that her mark was higher than mine, lol! We can do hard things has been a common phrase here in the last year.