God Comes Where He Is Wanted

God Comes Where He Is Wanted is a quote I recently heard in a sermon, and I’m pondering it with you today.

For Lent 2025, I’ll be writing new blog posts every day. I’m writing for just five unedited minutes on a quote of the day to deepen our faith in this Lenten season.

Day 3 of Lent 2025- March 7

I heard this quote in the Ash Wednesday sermon at my church. My pastor quoted Jon Tyson, an influential New York City pastor. You can watch the fascinating sermon in which this quote is featured HERE.

I remember reading the chilling opposite of this quote in a C.S. Lewis book I read in college – “The doors of hell are locked on the inside.” This means the people who choose to oppose God choose by their own will.

However, today’s quote makes the positive side vivid. God comes where he is wanted. He longs for relationship with humans who crave his presence. He doesn’t want us to follow him out of duty or just as an insurance policy against going to hell. God wants us to want him, just like he wants us. True love is freely given on both sides.

The psalmist captures this longing in several places:

My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God?

Psalm 42:2 NIV

You, God, are my God, earnestly I seek you; I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you, in a dry and parched land where there is no water.

Psalm 63:1 NIV

My soul yearns for you in the night; in the morning my spirit longs for you.

Isaiah 26:9a NIV

This quote and these scriptures force me to ask myself – do I long for God? Does he know that I want a relationship with him? Is this proven by my actions, not just by my wishes?

Just yesterday in a conversation with my counselor, I said that perhaps the reason I’ve felt God’s presence close by me every moment of the past three years of intense suffering is it’s a reward for my obedience. I decided even in the darkest times to keep up with my rhythms of reading morning devotions, praying intercessory prayers, singing praise songs, and attending corporate worship at my church. Even when I didn’t feel like doing these things because I felt betrayed by God, I kept up these rhythms for the future me, the one on the other side of all the suffering. I wanted to do her proud, and I wanted to do God proud too.

As I ponder this quote today, I am thinking more about how God came to me because he knew in my heart of hearts, even while I was ranting at him for the unfairness he was allowing in my life, I still wanted him. He knows my heart even better than I know it myself, and he honors my commitment to him no matter what happens.

I’m so glad that God comes where he is wanted even when we are going through the hardest times. He will honor our commitment to faith that demonstrates our fidelity to him. If we keep up the rhythms of faith, he will be faithful to us. I needed this reminder today, and perhaps you do too.

Join me again tomorrow for another reflection on a different quote.

'God comes where he is wanted' - ponder this quote with me. #quote #quoteoftheday #lent #spiritualgrowth Click To Tweet

Find all my additional resources for Lent on this page.

Are You Looking for a Book Launch Manager or Virtual Assistant?

If you’re launching a book in 2025 or beyond, be sure to book a call with me HERE to discuss your book launch. I’ve had over 50 clients since 2022, and I’d love to speak with you soon. I’m also taking on new VA clients. You can learn more and book a call with me on THIS PAGE.

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I send my weekly newsletter Tea on Tuesdays at 3:00 p.m. Central time every Tuesday.  I write an exclusive devotion for you each week that I share with you first.

To receive the newsletter, please subscribe below. I can’t wait to share personally with you each week!

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They’re Just Dust, and So Are You

They’re Just Dust, and So Are You is a quote I recently read in Craig Groeschel’s new book, and I’m pondering it with you today.

For Lent 2025, I’ll be writing new blog posts every day. I’m writing for just five unedited minutes on a quote of the day to deepen our faith in this Lenten season.

Day 2 of Lent 2025- March 6

I’m reading Craig Groeschel’s new book, The Benefit of Doubt, which I highly recommend. Today’s quote is pulled from a chapter where Craig explains how it’s hard to have faith when others, especially Christians, have let you down in big ways. I’ve certainly been there myself, so this message caught my attention.

Craig talks about a time when Paul and Barnabas were reaching the Gentiles with the Gospel message, yet the Jewish leaders persecuted them and drove them out of Jerusalem. This is what Paul and Barnabas did next:

So they shook the dust off their feet as a warning to them and went to Iconium. And the disciples were filled with joy and with the Holy Spirit.

Acts 13:51-52 NIV

Craig continues, “Did you notice the word “dust”? They shook it off. They chose joy…

I realize that if you’ve been mistreated, betrayed, or abused, it’s going to take a lot of praying, then some shaking, and maybe some counseling, then some shaking, and maybe some more praying and some introspection and some more shaking. It’s not easy, but at some point, for your sake, you’ve got to shake it off. Find the ability to forgive and heal and let it go and, like Paul and Barnabas, move on filled with the joy of the Holy Spirit.

Can I encourage you to look to Jesus and shake off whatever people have done to you? After all, they’re just dust.”

Craig says they’re just dust, but he also says several times in the chapter – “And so are you.”

Forgiving Others Who Are Just Dust

There is a whole group of people I need to forgive for the major sins they’ve committed against me. I know in my head I need to do this because it’s a command from God. However, my heart has wanted to point to the unfairness that continues, so I sometimes get stuck.

That’s why this quote – “They’re just dust, and so are you” is so helpful in my pursuit of forgiveness. The people who have hurt me seem less like monsters and villains when I remember they are just dust, as all of us have been since Adam was created.

The second part of the quote helps me the most. My natural tendency as an INFJ is to judge others. I am tempted to claim the high road as a pedestal from which I can look down on others. However, remembering that I am also just dust keeps me in touch with my humanity. If it weren’t for God’s work in my life, I probably would act just like they do.

I want to shake the dust off and choose joy while I forgive others for their harm against me. The visual image of shaking off dust is a powerful one I can apply when I’m tempted toward bitterness. Then I can smile at God and thank him for making me more like his Son every day as I walk in submission and obedience, even though I’m just dust like everyone else.

Join me again tomorrow for another reflection on a different quote.

'They're just dust, and so are you' - ponder this quote with me. #quote #quoteoftheday #lent #spiritualgrowth Click To Tweet

Find all my additional resources for Lent on this page.

Are You Looking for a Book Launch Manager or Virtual Assistant?

If you’re launching a book in 2025 or beyond, be sure to book a call with me HERE to discuss your book launch. I’ve had over 50 clients since 2022, and I’d love to speak with you soon. I’m also taking on new VA clients. You can learn more and book a call with me on THIS PAGE.

If you liked this post, I would appreciate your shares on social media!

Also, if you make a purchase from any of the links on this post, I receive a small commission at no additional cost to you. Thank you for your support!


I send my weekly newsletter Tea on Tuesdays at 3:00 p.m. Central time every Tuesday.  I write an exclusive devotion for you each week that I share with you first.

To receive the newsletter, please subscribe below. I can’t wait to share personally with you each week!

Want to know more about me before you sign up? You can read my story here and learn more about my books here. By signing up, you are agreeing to the terms of my privacy policy.

Out with the Old, In with the True

Out with the old, in with the true is a quote I just heard from a new client. It’s a great quote to start off the Lenten season.

For Lent 2025, I’ll be writing new blog posts every day. I’m writing for just five unedited minutes on a quote of the day to deepen our faith in this Lenten season.

Day 1 – Ash Wednesday, March 5

This quote has stuck with me since I heard it on Tuesday. My new client was commenting on the story of my life I had just shared with her, and she encouraged me with this word. We’ve all heard the phrase “Out with the old, in with the new.” But I hadn’t heard the spinoff “in with the true” until yesterday.

I’m coming out of a long season described as a dark night of the soul. It’s when my faith has been shaken to the core, and my thought life has been sabotaged by trauma and severe depression. I need a thought life refreshment that focuses forward with hope, and I can’t think of a better time to start that than Lent.

Growing up Lutheran, I practiced Lent with a solemn reverence. It was a time to reflect on the suffering Jesus endured on our behalf. The season always turned my thoughts inward. Even as a child, I reflected on my sins and my need for the salvation only Jesus could give me. That’s what made Easter morning so joyful after seven weeks of deep contemplation.

This is what I want to focus on in 2025 as I come out of a tough season filled with dark thoughts. I want to find inspiring quotes based on faith, some from my own books, and ponder them with you in this journey of writing publicly again for the first time in months. I welcome your comments below as you ponder what the quotes mean to you.

Let’s start this season of Lent “out with the old, in with the true” by focusing on God’s unchanging nature and his everlasting Word:

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.

Philippians 4:8 NIV

Join me again tomorrow for another reflection on a different quote.

'Out with the old, in with the true' - ponder this quote with me. #quote #quoteoftheday #lent #spiritualgrowth Click To Tweet

Find all my additional resources for Lent on this page.

Are You Looking for a Book Launch Manager or Virtual Assistant?

If you’re launching a book in 2025 or beyond, be sure to book a call with me HERE to discuss your book launch. I’ve had over 50 clients since 2022, and I’d love to speak with you soon. I’m also taking on new VA clients. You can learn more and book a call with me on THIS PAGE.

If you liked this post, I would appreciate your shares on social media!

Also, if you make a purchase from any of the links on this post, I receive a small commission at no additional cost to you. Thank you for your support!


I send my weekly newsletter Tea on Tuesdays at 3:00 p.m. Central time every Tuesday.  I write an exclusive devotion for you each week that I share with you first.

To receive the newsletter, please subscribe below. I can’t wait to share personally with you each week!

Want to know more about me before you sign up? You can read my story here and learn more about my books here. By signing up, you are agreeing to the terms of my privacy policy.