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Courage for When You Feel Behind
Description
The fountain nearby was empty. The people around were laughing, taking pictures, celebrating a milestone that had come right on schedule for them. And sitting there on the outside of it all, the feeling was impossible to shake: everyone else had arrived somewhere, and she had been left behind.
It was not just the timing of the graduation. It was grief still raw from losing a mother. It was financial difficulties that had quietly accumulated into lost credits and a delayed degree. It was the strange disorientation of watching life move forward for everyone else while your own had slowed to the pace of simple survival.
Most of us know that feeling in some form. The sense that the markers of life everyone else seems to hit naturally have somehow passed us by. The "what ifs" that circle back around in the quiet. The worry that falling behind once means being behind forever.
But Paul writes from his own experience of loss, failure, and hardship when he says: forget what is behind. Strain toward what is ahead. Not because the past does not matter or the pain was not real, but because holding onto what could have been only hinders us in the long race still in front of us. Each of our lives moves at a unique pace. No one is actually supposed to experience the same milestones at the same time. The comparison that makes us feel behind is built on a timeline that was never ours to begin with.
Straining toward what lies ahead requires courage. The courage to believe that what God has planned is better than what has already passed. The courage to loosen the grip on regret and reach instead for hope. With Christ beside us, we can run that race with confidence, trusting that He will bring things to pass in His perfect timing.
Your story is not finished. The empty fountain is not the last image. Press on.
Ponder Tonight:
Paul's instruction to forget what is behind was not written from a place of ease. He wrote it from prison, after years of suffering, which gives his words a weight that comfortable advice never could.
Feeling behind in life is often rooted in comparing our pace to someone else's timeline, and that comparison is almost always built on incomplete information about their story.
The promise in Philippians 3:20-21 reframes everything. Whatever has been lost, delayed, or missed in this life, a future is coming where every tear is wiped away and all things are made new.
Courage in the race of faith is not the absence of grief or regret. It is the decision, made again and again, to strain toward what lies ahead rather than orbit what lies behind.
Tonight's Scripture:
"Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead." — Philippians 3:13, NIV
Your Evening Prayer:
Savior,
You know how easy it is to dwell on the feeling of being behind. To replay what was missed, mourn what did not come on time, and quietly begin to believe that this is simply how things will always be. Forgive us for the grip we keep on what lies behind us.
Renew our hope tonight. Stir us toward greater faithfulness. Remind us that the things to come are more wonderful than we can yet imagine, and that Your timing has never once been wrong. Cultivate courage in us so that we are not afraid to step forward in the confidence of Your love.
The race is not over. Help us to run it with our eyes fixed ahead.
Amen.
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