God Tests in Order to Entrust
Day 30 · Genesis 12:1–3
📖 TODAY’S SCRIPTURE
Genesis 12:1–3 (NIV)
“The Lord had said to Abram, ‘Go from your country, your people and your father’s household to the land I will show you. I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.'”
Today’s John 15 thread: The branch that bears fruit is the branch that has learned to obey when the Gardener speaks — even before it can see the result. Abram didn’t know where he was going. He just knew who was sending him. That’s what abiding looks like when it’s tested.
✍️ REFLECTION
God tells Abram to leave everything.
His country. His people. His father’s household. All of it — his comfort, his routine, the life he had built. And God doesn’t show him a map. He just says: “Go to the land I will show you.”
No address. No timeline. No guarantee of what it would look like when he got there.
And Abram just went.
No arguing like Moses: “Who am I to go? What if they don’t listen? Send someone else.” No running like Jonah. No negotiating. The very next verse says he packed up and left, just as the Lord had told him.
Q1: Is there an instruction from God you’ve been holding back on obeying because you can’t see where it leads? What are you waiting for?
I think the reason Abram could move so quickly is found right here in these three verses. Before God asked him to leave, He made him a promise. “I will make you into a great nation. I will bless you. I will make your name great. All peoples on earth will be blessed through you.”
God gave the assurance before He gave the instruction. He put enough in Abram’s hands to give him the inner strength to go.
That’s how God often works. He doesn’t explain the whole plan. But He gives you just enough — enough of Himself, enough of His promise — to take the next step.
And here is what I have come to understand: the life of faith is never without its tests. Every person God ever used went through seasons of being tested first. Not because God wanted to break them — but because He was preparing to entrust them with something more.
God tests in order to entrust.
The test is not punishment. It’s preparation. The harder the test, the greater what He is preparing you for.
Q2: What promise from God — from Scripture, or something He has spoken to your heart — could give you the strength to take the next step, even if you can’t see where you’re going?
Hebrews 11:8 says: “By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going.”
He did not know where he was going. He went anyway.
That is faith. Not certainty about the destination. Certainty about the One who called you.
Q3: What would it look like for you to just get up and go — like Abram — trusting God with the details you don’t have yet?
🌿 REMAIN IN HIM
Take a moment before you move on. This isn’t a to-do. It’s an invitation to stay.
Reflect honestly: What is God asking you to step into that you’ve been delaying? Be specific. Name it.
Bring it to Jesus: Come with the fear, the uncertainty, the questions. Tell Him honestly what’s holding you back. Then ask for what Abram must have had: enough of His presence to take the next step.
Trust the Gardener: He tests in order to entrust. The pruning seasons are never the final word — they are always preparation for something more. Trust the Gardener with the part of the plan you cannot yet see.
🙏 PRAYER
Father, thank You for speaking through Your Word today. Like Abram, there are things You have asked of me that I’ve been slow to obey because I couldn’t see where they led. Forgive me. Give me the same kind of faith that made Abram pack up and go the very next morning. I know You don’t owe me a map. But I trust the One who holds it. Help me to get up and go — wherever You lead. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
💡 MEMORY VERSE
Hebrews 11:8 (NIV) — “By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going.”
This post is part of the Abide in Him Daily devotional series — reading Scripture through the lens of John 15:1–17. The branch doesn’t manufacture the fruit. It bears it because it stays connected to the Vine.
📖 A note on where we are in the reading: We’ve finished the book of Job and are now in the story of Abraham, beginning at Genesis 12. Chronological reading plans often place Job before this point — in the early era of the patriarchs. Now we pick up the story of the first great man of faith, from the moment God called him to leave everything.
