Isaiah 55:8 — “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord.”

The direction of your life will always follow the perspective you choose to live from. You are not just living life—you are interpreting life. Every decision, every reaction, every emotion flows out of how you see what you are facing. Two people can walk through the same circumstance and come out completely different—not because of what happened, but because of how they saw it. If your perspective is limited to what you feel, what you see, or what you’ve been through, then your life will be shaped by limitations. But when your perspective shifts to God’s, everything begins to change—even if nothing around you has changed yet.

Your life is always moving in the direction of your strongest perspective. If you live from your feelings, you will react emotionally—up one moment, down the next, unstable and easily shaken. If you live from your past, you will stay stuck—constantly interpreting today through yesterday’s wounds, replaying what God has already forgiven, and reliving what He has already redeemed. But when you choose to live from God’s perspective, your direction changes immediately. You stop reacting and start responding. You stop being driven by what you see and start being led by what He said. Think about Peter walking on the water—when his perspective stayed on Jesus, he did the impossible; when it shifted to the wind, he began to sink. The environment didn’t change—his perspective did. The same is true for you. Victory or defeat is not determined by what surrounds you, but by what you are seeing in the middle of it.

Many believers are frustrated because their life feels like a cycle—same struggles, same reactions, same battles over and over again. But repetition is often the result of resistance. Israel wandered in the wilderness for forty years, not because God lacked direction, but because they resisted His perspective. God saw a promised land; they saw giants. God said, “Go forward”; they said, “We can’t.” And because they refused to align their perspective with His, they repeated the same ground again and again. The same thing happens in our lives. When we resist surrender—when we hold on to our opinions, our fears, our need to understand—we delay what God is trying to do. Breakthrough doesn’t come from trying harder; it comes from seeing differently. The moment you stop arguing with God’s perspective and start agreeing with it, the cycle begins to break.

God is not in the fog—you are. He is not confused, uncertain, or trying to figure out what’s next. He is above it all, seeing the end from the beginning, guiding every step with perfect clarity. What feels uncertain to you is already settled with Him. What feels delayed to you is already timed by Him. What feels like a dead end to you is already a doorway in His plan. Joseph didn’t understand the pit, the prison, or the betrayal—but God saw the palace all along. Jesus’ disciples didn’t understand the cross—but God saw the resurrection. You may not understand what you’re walking through right now, but you can trust the One who sees what you cannot. Faith is not having all the answers—it is trusting the One who does.

It’s like driving in heavy fog—you can only see a few feet ahead, and everything feels uncertain and tense. You slow down, second-guess, and strain to see what’s coming next. But above the clouds, the sun is still shining, and someone looking from above can see the entire road clearly—every turn, every stretch, every destination. That’s where God is. He is not limited by your visibility. He is not reacting to your situation—He is already leading you through it.


Your future does not change when your circumstances change—it changes the moment your perspective does. When you stop living from what you feel and start living from what God says, everything shifts. You move from confusion to clarity, from fear to faith, from reaction to direction. The life God has for you is not found in trying to control what you see—it is found in trusting what He sees.

Lord, lift me above my own thinking. Break every mindset that keeps me limited to what I feel or what I see. Help me to see my life from Your perspective and to trust what You already know. I surrender my understanding, my fears, and my need to control. Teach me to walk by faith and not by sight. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

When fear or frustration rises today, stop and ask: “What is God’s perspective on this?” Then choose to respond based on His truth—not your feelings.

Ann Stanley  

Britany Smith ~ Breast Cancer

Christopher & Yting Kelley

Danny Jarrard 

David Franklin

Dinay Rodriguez

Ellen Boyd 

Jean Muehlfelt

Jillian Gray 

Kim McClain’s Daughter, Amanda

Mary Williams

Mike And Paula Ferris And Family  

Nancy Riley

Phillip Roach

Susan Bankston

Theresa Bain

Wes Knight

Amy Garner’s Dad

Andrea Nix– Friend of the Shelnutt’s

Angela Bryan’s Sisters

Annette Ford

Brando Echarte

Carol Lawhead – Riverside in Conyers

Darlene Kelley – Cancer Treatment

Darlene Wiggins

Debbie Foskey 

Deon Lotter

Don And Carol Franklin – Mae’s Cousins

Doris Loyd

Dr. and Mrs. Davis

Ed Adkins – Friend of Brian Edwards

Ed Franklin’s Son In Law – Heart Surgery

Eric Magnusson’s Mother

Eric Ward

Friend of Linda Hodge

Gayle Sparks

Gloria Young

Jake Jenkins

James Burnette

Jean Partee

Jean Partee’s Sister

Jessica Headrick  

John McClain’s Mother

Joni Oberhage

June Cronan

June Cronan’s Sister

June Davis

Kailey Bateman

Kim McClain’s Mother 

Kim’s Sisters – Ann & Brenda & Mateen

Lillianna Magnusson’s Mom

Linda Mays

Lonzo Christian 

Lori Blount’s Mother

Mary Williamson – Dana Jackson’s Mom

Mrs. Franklin 

Nancy Brown

Nora Allison

Paul Bateman

Ron And Johnnie Barry – Friends Of Ashton & Glenda Bateman

Rose Fuller – Pruitt-Monroe Nursing Home, Forsyth GA

Roy Roach

Scott Lanier 

Scotty Nix

Stephanie Seivers – Friend of the Shelnutt’s

Steve Michaels

Tammy Shelnutt

Tom Witcher