Tag: Trial of Faith

  • MIT-8 “Unimaginable”

    While attending Microsoft Active Directory training in Redmond in 2016, I noticed the sunlight breaking through the forest. What feels like delay may actually be preparation for something unimaginable.

    Excerpt
    God may be doing something unimaginable while we are still standing in the middle of the trial.


    Intro
    Sometimes life feels like a long stretch between promise and fulfillment. In those moments it is easy to wonder if heaven has gone quiet or if God has forgotten us. But the scriptures show something different. The journey from Point A to Point B is often where faith is tested and refined. Once we arrive at Point B, faith is no longer required in the same way.


    Notes from the Speaker or Scripture

    “He called down famine on the land
    and destroyed all their supplies of food;
    and he sent a man before them—
    Joseph, sold as a slave.
    They bruised his feet with shackles,
    his neck was put in irons,
    till what he foretold came to pass,
    till the word of the Lord proved him true.
    The king sent and released him,
    the ruler of peoples set him free.
    He made him master of his household,
    ruler over all he possessed,
    to instruct his princes as he pleased
    and teach his elders wisdom.”

    Psalm 105:16–22 (NIV)

    Joseph’s life moved through deep hardship before reaching its purpose. He spent years as a slave and prisoner, yet those years quietly prepared him for leadership that would later save nations.

    Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf explained:

    “Joseph must have wondered if God had forgotten him. God had something unimaginable in mind for Joseph. He used this period of trial to strengthen Joseph’s character and put him in a position to save his family.”

    “God Will Do Something Unimaginable,” October 2020 general conference

    Even during Joseph’s trials, scripture repeatedly reminds us that the Lord was with him (Genesis 39:2–3, 21, 23). Others recognized that divine help even when Joseph himself was still enduring difficulty.


    Perspective
    Many of us assume that comfort equals God’s approval and hardship means something is wrong. But the scriptures challenge that assumption. Nephi opened his record by acknowledging “many afflictions” while still declaring that he had been “highly favored of the Lord in all [his] days” (1 Nephi 1:1).

    Lehi later taught Jacob that God can “consecrate thine afflictions for thy gain” (2 Nephi 2:2).

    In my own experience, especially in difficult IT problems or long troubleshooting sessions, answers rarely appear immediately. The solution often emerges only after patience, teamwork, and persistence. Many times the breakthrough arrives when I least expect it. Looking back, I realize that what felt like delay was actually preparation. God was shaping the path while I was still learning to trust Him.


    Practice (today, not someday)
    Today I will remember that God sees the entire path even when I see only a small part of it. When challenges appear, I will trust that He is still present and still working through the process.


    Final Reflection
    Faith often grows strongest when we cannot yet see the outcome. What feels like delay may simply be the space where God is preparing something greater than we imagined.


    Pocket I’m Keeping
    God may be preparing something unimaginable.


    What I Hear Now
    “God had something unimaginable in mind for Joseph.” — Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf


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  • MIT-8 “Trial of your Faith”

    Some promises stretch longer than we expect, but the One who formed the arch is the same One who sustains it.

    Excerpt
    Between God’s promise and its fulfillment lives the trial of our faith, a sacred space known only to Him.

    Intro
    I realized something today. The distance between what God promises and when it actually happens is not empty space. It is what we call the trial of our faith. Heaven measures that gap, not us..

    Notes from the author
    God tested Abraham’s faith.. He waited decades for the son God had promised to him and Sarah. God promised descendants as countless as the stars. Abraham believed. That belief strengthened his relationship with God. (Genesis 15:6). Later, God commanded Abraham to offer his long awaited son.
    Abraham obeyed.
    God honored him.

    :

    “By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, for because thou hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son:”
    Genesis 22:16-18

    Why did Abraham have to wait so long? God certainly had the power to bless him sooner. Yet the waiting served divine purposes. It proved his faith. It purified his faith.

    Perspective
    Moroni defined faith as “things which are hoped for and not seen.”

    Faith operates in what we cannot yet measure. It requires trust before evidence appears.

    He warned us not to dispute simply because we do not see.

    Faith does not disappear when blessings come. It transforms.

    Until fulfillment arrives, faith carries the weight of the promise.

    That is why blessings often follow “after the trial of [our] faith” (Ether 12:6).

    Jesus declared, “I will try the faith of my people” (3 Nephi 26:11; see also Mosiah 23:21). James explained the purpose: “The trying of your faith worketh patience” (James 1:3). Delayed blessings are not denial. They are development.

    Practice (today, not someday)
    Today I will trust God in the waiting. I will not measure His promises by my timeline. Like Abraham, I will believe even when fulfillment feels distant.

    Final Reflection
    The gap is not punishment. It is preparation. God shapes the soul in the silence between promise and provision.

    Pocket I’m Keeping
    I stand on sacred ground between promise and fulfillment.

    What I Hear Now
    “I will try the faith of my people.”
    “The trying of your faith worketh patience.”

    Scripture
    Ether 12:6


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    For usage terms, please see the Legal Disclaimer.

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